Information about Hungarian Ty

Hungarian language
Alphabet, including ő ű and
cs dz dzs gy ly ny sz ty zs
Phonetics and phonology
Vowel harmony
Grammar
   Noun phrases
   Verbs
T-V distinction
Regulatory body
Hungarian name
Language history
   Sound correspondences

Hungarian pronunciation of English • Old Hungarian scriptEnglish words from Hungarian

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Linguistics & Pronunciation

Ty is the thirty-fourth letter of the Hungarian alphabet. Its name is "tyey" and represents /c/ a voiceless palatal plosive.

Usage

It is only used this way in Hungarian. In Hungarian, even if two characters are put together to make a different sound, they are considered one letter, and acronyms keep the letter intact.

Examples

These examples are Hungarian words that use the letter ty, with the English translation following.
  • kutya = dog
  • rekettye = broom
  • dutyi = jail (slang)
  • totyogó = toddler
  • tyúk = hen
Hungarian (magyar nyelv listen  ) is a Finno-Ugric language (more specifically an Ugric language) unrelated to most other languages in Europe.
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Hungarian alphabet is an extension of the Latin alphabet.

One sometimes speaks of the smaller and greater Hungarian alphabet, depending on whether the letters Q, W, X, Y
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double acute accent ( ˝ ) is a diacritic mark of the Latin script used primarily in written Hungarian. Consequently, it is also known as Hungarumlaut.[1] The signs formed with diacritic marks count as letters of their own right in the Hungarian alphabet.
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Cs is a digraph of the Latin alphabet.
Hungarian language

Alphabet, including ő ű and
cs dz dzs gy ly ny sz ty zs

Phonetics and phonology
Vowel harmony
Grammar
   Noun phrases
   Verbs
T-V distinction
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Dz is a digraph, the seventh letter of the Hungarian alphabet. It is pronounced (using English pronunciation with letter romanization) "dzay" in the alphabet, but just "dz" when spoken in a word. Using the IPA phoneme, it can be written as /dz/.
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Dzs is the eighth letter, and only trigraph, of the Hungarian alphabet. It is pronounced [dʒeː] as a letter, and represents the voiced postalveolar affricate (IPA:
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Gy is the thirteenth letter of the Hungarian alphabet, preceding H and succeeding G. It represents a voiced palatal plosive /ɟ/. In Hungarian, the letter's name is "dyay.
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Ly is the twentieth letter of the Hungarian alphabet. Its Hungarian name is ellipszilon /ɛlːipsilon/ or elly /ɛjː/
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Ny is a digraph in a number of languages such as Catalan, Hungarian, Indonesian, and Luganda. In most of these languages it denotes the palatal nasal (/ɲ/).
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Sz is the thirty-second letter of the Hungarian alphabet. Its name is (using English pronunciation with letter romanization) "ess" in the alphabet. It represents /s/.
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Zs is the last (forty-fourth) letter of the Hungarian alphabet. Its name is "zhey" and represents /ʒ/, a voiced postalveolar fricative.

Usage

It is only used this way in Hungarian.
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bold:

Phoneme Most common
phonetic value
in IPA Most common
grapheme [voice] place of articulation type of articulation
/p/ [p] p - bilabial stop
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Hungarian grammar is the study of the rules governing the use of the Hungarian language, a Finno-Ugric language spoken in Hungary and in adjacent areas of Romania, Slovakia, Ukraine, Serbia, Croatia, Austria, and Slovenia (all territories lost after World War I).
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noun phrases in Hungarian grammar.

Syntax

The order of elements in the noun phrase is always determiner, adjective, noun.

Grammatical marking

Hungarian does not have grammatical gender or a grammatical distinction between animate and inanimate.
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verbs in Hungarian grammar.

Lemma or citation form

There is basically only one pattern for verb endings, with predictable variations dependent on the phonological context.

The lemma or citation form is always the third person singular indefinite present.
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Hungarian names use the "eastern name order", or family name followed by given name. Hungary is the only European country to do so. So the terms "first name" and "last name" are potentially confusing and should be avoided, as they do not in this case denote the given and family
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Hungarian is a Finno-Ugric language with some 14 million speakers predominantly in Europe, and it is also present in North America as an immigrant language. The language is typologically agglutinative: it uses affixes- before the root word (stem) called prefixes, and after it,
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Old Hungarian

Unicode range Not in Unicode (see proposal )
ISO 15924 Hung

Note: This page may contain IPA phonetic symbols in Unicode.
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Hungarian language

Alphabet, including ő ű and
cs dz dzs gy ly ny sz ty zs

Phonetics and phonology
Vowel harmony
Grammar
   Noun phrases
   Verbs
T-V distinction
Regulatory body
Hungarian name
..... Click the link for more information.
Hungarian (magyar nyelv listen  ) is a Finno-Ugric language (more specifically an Ugric language) unrelated to most other languages in Europe.
..... Click the link for more information.
Hungarian alphabet is an extension of the Latin alphabet.

One sometimes speaks of the smaller and greater Hungarian alphabet, depending on whether the letters Q, W, X, Y
..... Click the link for more information.
The voiceless palatal plosive is a type of consonantal sound used in some spoken languages. The symbol in the International Phonetic Alphabet that represents this sound is c, and the equivalent X-SAMPA symbol is c.
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Acronyms and initialisms are abbreviations, such as NATO, laser, and IBM, that are formed using the initial letters of words or word parts in a phrase or name.
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Latin alphabet
Child systems Numerous: see Alphabets derived from the Latin
Sister systems Cyrillic
Coptic
Armenian
Runic/Futhark
Unicode range See Latin characters in Unicode
ISO 15924 Latn

Note
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A digraph, bigraph or digram is a pair of characters used to write one phoneme (distinct sound) or a sequence of phonemes that does not correspond to the two characters in sequence.
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Aa is a digraph that occurs in some languages, e.g. in the Dutch alphabet, where it represents the [a] sound.

See also

  • Å
  • Ā

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Ae is a digraph consisting of the letters A and E that occurs in many languages. In Irish orthography it stands for the vowel [eː] between two velarized consonants, e.g.
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ai is a digraph used in many languages. Typically it represents the diphthong /ai/ or some variant thereof. In English, as a result of the Great Vowel Shift, ai
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au is a digraph that occurs in many languages.

In English

In English, au represents the /ɔ/ or /a/ (see caught-cot merger) sound in faun.
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aw is a digraph that occurs in many languages.

In English

In English, aw represents the /ɔ/ sound in pawn.
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