enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Hungarian orthography - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hungarian_orthography

    Hungarian is written with the Hungarian alphabet, an extended version of the Latin alphabet. [ 1 ] Its letters usually indicate sounds, [ 2 ] except when constituting morphemes are to be marked (see below). The extensions include consonants written with digraphs or a trigraph [ 3 ] and vowel letters marked with diacritics.

  3. Hungarian alphabet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hungarian_alphabet

    The Hungarian alphabet (Hungarian: magyar ábécé) is an extension of the Latin alphabet used for writing the Hungarian language. The alphabet is based on the Latin alphabet, with several added variations of letters, consisting 44 letters. Over the 26 letters of the ISO basic Latin alphabet it has five letters with an acute accent, two letters ...

  4. History of the Hungarian language - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_Hungarian...

    Hungarian is a Uralic language of the Ugric group. It has been spoken in the region of modern-day Hungary since the Hungarian conquest of the Carpathian Basin in the late 9th century. Hungarian's ancestral language probably separated from the Ob-Ugric languages during the Bronze Age.

  5. Old Hungarian script - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Old_Hungarian_script

    The Old Hungarian script or Hungarian runes (Hungarian: Székely-magyar rovás, 'székely-magyar runiform', or rovásírás) is an alphabetic writing system used for writing the Hungarian language. Modern Hungarian is written using the Latin-based Hungarian alphabet. The term "old" refers to the historical priority of the script compared with ...

  6. Double acute accent - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Double_acute_accent

    The double acute accent ( ̋) is a diacritic mark of the Latin and Cyrillic scripts. It is used primarily in Hungarian or Chuvash, and consequently it is sometimes referred to by typographers as hungarumlaut. [1] The signs formed with a regular umlaut are letters in their own right in the Hungarian alphabet—for instance, they are separate ...

  7. Hungarian grammar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hungarian_grammar

    Hungarian grammar is the grammar of Hungarian, a Finno-Ugric language that is spoken mainly in Hungary and in parts of its seven neighboring countries. Hungarian is a highly agglutinative language which uses various affixes , mainly suffixes , to change the meaning of words and their grammatical function.

  8. Hungarian names - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hungarian_names

    Hungarian names include surnames and given names. Some people have more than one given name, but only one is normally used. In the Hungarian language, whether written or spoken, names are invariably given in the "Eastern name order", with the family name followed by the given name (in foreign-language texts in languages that use Western name order, names are often given with the family name last).

  9. Yogh - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yogh

    In Middle English, it also stood for the phoneme /x/ and its allophone [ç] as in niȝt ("night", in an early Middle English way still often pronounced as spelled so: [niçt]), and also represented the phonemes /j/ and /dʒ/. Sometimes, yogh stood for /j/ or /w/, as in the word ȝoȝelinge [ˈjowəlɪŋɡə], "yowling".