INTRODUCTION |
Simone: Hi everyone and welcome back to HungarianPod101.com. This is Lower Beginner, season 1, lesson 25, Are You Having Trouble Sleeping in Hungary? I’m Simone. |
Csaba: And I’m Csaba. |
Simone: In this last lesson of our series, we’re going to learn about Hungarian conditionals. |
Csaba: The conversation takes place in Anne’s apartment complex. |
Simone: Where Anne is talking to one of the maintenance people. |
Csaba: They use formal language. |
Simone: Let’s listen to the conversation. |
POST CONVERSATION BANTER |
Csaba: This is somewhat unrealistic. In Hungary, it is really hard to find these maintenance people anymore. |
Simone: What do you mean? |
Csaba: Well, many of them are really hard to schedule with, painting and plumbing and all these are busy jobs nowadays. A huge chunk of the blue-collar workforce is moving west, to Great Britain and Germany. |
Simone: I’ve heard about that. I guess it is just understandable during the years of the financial crisis. |
Csaba: Right. Their salaries are somewhat better now at home too, but it is nothing compared to Western Europe. |
Simone: So once you manage to schedule a job, try to stick to it. |
Csaba: Absolutely. |
Simone: Absolutely. |
Alright, let's take a look at the vocabulary for this lesson. The first word we shall see is? |
Zavar. |
Disturb, bother. |
Zavar. |
Zavar. |
Next? |
Muszáj. |
Have to. |
Must. |
Muszáj. |
Muszáj. |
Next? |
Fest. |
Paint. |
Fest. |
Fest. |
Next? |
Hangos. |
Loud. |
Han-gos. |
Hangos. |
Next? |
Gép. |
Machine. |
Gép. |
Gép. |
Next? |
Vasárnap. |
Sunday. |
Va-sár-nap. |
Vasárnap. |
Next? |
Ugye. |
Right. |
Ugye. |
Ugye. |
Next? |
Hullafáradt. |
Dead tired. |
Hullafáradt. |
Hullafáradt. |
Last? |
Fáradt. |
Tired. |
Fáradt. |
Fáradt. |
KEY VOCAB AND PHRASES |
Simone: Let's have a closer look at the usage for some of the words and phrases from this lesson. |
Csaba: The first word is ugye. This word works the same way as the “right?” at the end of a sentence. |
Simone: Let’s hear it in practice. |
Csaba: Te is kérsz, ugye? |
Simone: “You’d like some too, right?” |
Csaba: Te is kérsz, ugye? |
Simone: Is it always the end of the sentence? |
Csaba: No, not at all. You know that in Hungarian word order is not as strict as in English. |
Simone: Ok, let’s hear another example then. |
Csaba: Ugye te is amerikai vagy? |
Simone: “You’re American too, right?” |
Csaba: Ugye te is amerikai vagy? |
Simone: All right, let’s move on. |
Csaba: The next word is muszáj. It means “have to, must.” |
Simone: Let’s use it in a sentence. |
Csaba: Holnap muszáj dolgoznom. |
Simone: “I must work tomorrow.” |
Csaba: Holnap muszáj dolgoznom. |
Simone: If you negate it, you get “don’t have to” and not “mustn’t,” right? |
Csaba: That is correct. Listen to this: Nem muszáj kifizetned. |
Simone: “You don’t have to pay for it.” |
Csaba: Nem muszáj kifizetned. Kifizetned is “for you to pay for it.” |
Simone: All right. I’m getting dead tired of these explanations. |
Csaba: Wonderful segue. |
Simone: And that's the next word we’ll learn is “dead tired.” |
Csaba: Hullafáradt. It is a compound noun, hulla is “corpse” and fáradt is “tired.” |
Simone: Let’s put it in a sentence. |
Csaba: Hullafáradt vagyok, nem aludtam. |
Simone: “I’m dead tired, I didn’t sleep.” |
Csaba: Hullafáradt vagyok, nem aludtam. |
Simone: Me neither. Let’s go to the grammar, before we fall asleep! |
GRAMMAR POINT |
Simone: In this lesson we’re going to learn the conditional. |
Csaba: We're going to start with a couple of ready-made sentences, then explain the grammar. |
Simone: The first use is creating hypothetical situations. Like the English sentence: “I’d be glad if you dropped by.” |
Csaba: Örülnék, ha beugranál. |
Simone: Say it again, and please give extra emphasis to the conditional ending. |
Csaba: Örülnék, ha beugranál. Both of these verbs are conditional. |
Simone: All right, and what other situations do we use them in? |
Csaba: The second use is polite requests. |
Simone: For example: “Could you explain this again?” |
Csaba: Elmagyarázná meg egyszer? |
Simone: Again, please. |
Csaba: Elmagyarázná meg egyszer? This sentence sounds formal. |
Simone: So, hypothetical situations and polite requests. |
Csaba: Also asking for permission: Használhatnám a telefonját? |
Simone: “May I use your phone?” |
Csaba: Használhatnám a telefonját? |
Simone: Is there anything else? |
Csaba: Yes, you also express your heart’s desires using this construction. In an early lesson we had Bárcsak ne esne! |
Simone: “If only it wasn't raining!” One more time. |
Csaba: Bárcsak ne esne! |
Simone: All right, and how do we conjugate these? |
Csaba: Basically, you want to get an infinitive from the dictionary. Take zavarni. |
Simone: “To bother.” |
Csaba: Than you cut off the -ni ending, so zavarni becomes zavar. |
Simone: Then you look at the conjugation table, I guess. |
Csaba: Yes, and attach the ending you need for the given person. For first person, the ending is -nék. |
Simone: So “I’d bother” is... |
Csaba: Zavarnék. What you have to keep in mind is that there is definite and indefinite conjugation here as well and the vowel harmony still applies. |
Outro
|
Simone: Okay, everyone, that's the last lesson in this series, but we'll see you in our next series. Thanks for listening. |
Csaba: Sziasztok! |
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