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词汇 Hungarian
释义

Definition of Hungarian in English:

Hungarian

adjective hʌŋˈɡɛːrɪənˌhəŋˈɡɛriən
  • Relating to Hungary, its people, or their language.

    (与)匈牙利(有关)的;(与)匈牙利人(有关)的;(与)匈牙利语(有关)的

    Example sentencesExamples
    • International athletics officials and the World Anti-Doping Agency could be on a collision course over allegations of a controversial drugs cover-up for two top Hungarian throwers.
    • ‘I thought Hungarian food was wonderful,’ I said consolingly.
    • The four main hurdles confronting an overseas investor in the Hungarian market are language, property law and title, bank funding and ongoing management of the property.
    • The festival includes both new and established artists, showing the diversity of Hungarian culture.
    • The Hungarian composer carried out extensive research on the folk melodies and developed a classification system for Hungarian peasant songs.
    • They found that the church served as an important social meeting point and was an institution where the Hungarian language was still valued.
    • But, in exile in London, these radically dissimilar writers met to speak their shared language and to exchange reminiscences of Hungarian food and Hungarian music.
    • He is, however, a student of the Hungarian language.
    • The Hungarian language constitutes one of the most significant national symbols.
    • However, this will only be useful for Hungarian language websites aimed at Hungarian readers.
    • According to the author, the website, working on the grassroots principle, will become an important instrument for the writing of Hungarian history.
    • The victim was a 20-year-old Hungarian au pair, with whom he had formed a non-sexual relationship after he met her through a colleague.
    • Local archives house valuable deeds documenting the glory of the mediaeval city, which has witnessed the coronation of 11 Hungarian kings and eight regal wives.
    • The Hungarian language is very beautiful, but it is totally different from those of our neighbours.
    • Originally of Hungarian stock, she was born into a wealthy Viennese family in the 1920s, educated all over the place, including three years at an English boarding school, which she adored.
    • In fact the whole group of migrant workers could be sacked on the spot, because, he had learned, another 400 Hungarian workers were on the way to take their place.
    • A year ago, 20 contemporary Hungarian artists, mostly working with textile, decided to revive this art form as well as their national past.
    • After two or three years the foreign companies moved in and instead of investing in existing industries, simply bought up Hungarian companies with a view to closing them down and buying into the market.
    • In the past five years, Hungarian pet food producers have increased their exports by more than fourfold, from about $55 million in 1999.
    • The worm sends infected messages in Hungarian language.
noun hʌŋˈɡɛːrɪənˌhəŋˈɡɛriən
  • 1A native or inhabitant of Hungary, or a person of Hungarian descent.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • There are two opposing theories as to the origin of the Magyars, or native Hungarians.
    • The second was to try to beat the Hungarians at the European Championships.
    • And it's because we felt that the Hungarians had a certain black humor which translated to this particular job.
    • One-third of Hungarians then lived outside Hungary.
    • Whether in the end it was the Hungarians who chased the Russians out or not is debatable.
    • Ethnic Hungarians, or Magyars, make up the majority of Hungary's 10 million people.
    • The only significant ethnic minorities are Slovenes, Croats, and small numbers of Czechs and Hungarians.
    • The final results in the separate events of the combined exercises showed that the Hungarians still have their hold on the pommel horse.
    • The Poles, the Czechs, and the Hungarians made their political choice.
    • Any chance of the Hungarians bouncing back from that loss was shattered by events which went far beyond the disappointment of sporting defeat.
    • Most English people differ from Hungarians in one crucial respect.
    • The campaigners estimate that up to a tenth of all Europeans and a quarter of all Hungarians live or work in floodplains.
    • At the same time, German troops, followed by Italians and Hungarians, invaded Yugoslavia.
    • According to the national self-image, Hungarians are wine drinkers, but beer drinking is more common.
    • Why didn't those Hungarians, Czechs and Poles realise that?
    • The Hungarians finished 8th as a team, an improvement over the 1983 World Championships.
    • Poles, Hungarians, and ordinary Russians saw us as credible champions of their democratic aspirations.
    • His passing will be mourned by the Greeks, Croats, Hungarians, Italians and any other ethnic group you can name.
    • Germans and Hungarians seem to be about the only peoples he liked.
    • Trade is a two-way street and our free-trade agreements with the Poles, Czechs and Hungarians are as much an opportunity for them as for us.
  • 2mass noun The official language of Hungary, spoken also by some 2.5 million people in Romania. Hungarian is a Finno-Ugric language and is the only major language of the Ugric branch.

    匈牙利语(匈牙利官方语言,在罗马尼亚也有大约250万使用者;是一种芬兰-乌戈尔语,也是乌戈尔语支的唯一主要语言)。亦称MAGYAR

    Also called Magyar
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Names in Finnish, Estonian, and Hungarian are omitted because they are not Indo-European languages.
    • In the border provinces, Italian, Slovene, Croatian, Hungarian, and Czech are also spoken.
    • Compulsory language training in Hungarian was forced on Slovak children, and Hungarian became the official language.
    • The emails can use a variety of different languages including English, French, Spanish and Hungarian.
    • The songs would have to be coached by someone who knows the song style and is fluent in Hungarian, a difficult language.
    • He studied more than fifteen languages, including Hebrew, Hungarian, Arabic, and Lithuanian.
    • The Estonian language, along with Finnish and Hungarian, is one of the few surviving languages in the Finno-Ugric group.
    • People say that Hungarian is the language of the future, and it always will be.
    • Estonian belongs to the Finno-Ugric linguistic group, related closely to Finnish and more distantly to Hungarian and various languages spoken in Siberia.
    • Interestingly, as seen in the last column, despite being spoken by a nation in continental Europe, Hungarian is not an Indo-European language.
    • However, Dr Rogers will continue to maintain interest in the college and may write books in Hungarian.
    • ‘Finding interpreters who can go from Hungarian into Estonian won't be easy,’ frets one official.
    • In 1920 Hungarian was spoken by three-quarters of the population, but by 1971 only one-quarter of the population could speak the language.
    • Finnish is one of the most isolated languages of Europe, distantly related to Hungarian and Turkish but spoken by very few non-Finns.
    • Cox was a serious amateur philologist and had reading knowledge of the Romance languages along with Hungarian, Polish, Greek and German.
    • He speaks seven languages including English, French, Italian, Dutch, Hungarian, and Romanian.
    • Most countries in Europe have their own languages, be it Danish, Hungarian, Finnish, German, Polish, etc.
    • The new languages include Czech, Danish, Dutch, Greek, Hungarian, Norwegian, Polish and Swedish.
    • His books have been translated into several languages, including German, Dutch, French, Hungarian and Japanese.
    • The English language has had an impact on how Hungarian Americans speak Hungarian.

Origin

From medieval Latin Hungarī (a name given to the Hungarians, who called themselves the Magyar) + -an.

Rhymes

agrarian, antiquarian, apiarian, Aquarian, Arian, Aryan, authoritarian, barbarian, Bavarian, Bulgarian, Caesarean (US Cesarean), centenarian, communitarian, contrarian, Darien, disciplinarian, egalitarian, equalitarian, establishmentarian, fruitarian, Gibraltarian, grammarian, Hanoverian, humanitarian, latitudinarian, libertarian, librarian, majoritarian, millenarian, necessarian, necessitarian, nonagenarian, octogenarian, ovarian, Parian, parliamentarian, planarian, predestinarian, prelapsarian, proletarian, quadragenarian, quinquagenarian, quodlibetarian, Rastafarian, riparian, rosarian, Rotarian, sabbatarian, Sagittarian, sanitarian, Sauveterrian, sectarian, seminarian, septuagenarian, sexagenarian, topiarian, totalitarian, Trinitarian, ubiquitarian, Unitarian, utilitarian, valetudinarian, vegetarian, veterinarian, vulgarian

Definition of Hungarian in US English:

Hungarian

adjectiveˌhəNGˈɡerēənˌhəŋˈɡɛriən
  • Relating to Hungary, its people, or their language.

    (与)匈牙利(有关)的;(与)匈牙利人(有关)的;(与)匈牙利语(有关)的

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The worm sends infected messages in Hungarian language.
    • The four main hurdles confronting an overseas investor in the Hungarian market are language, property law and title, bank funding and ongoing management of the property.
    • A year ago, 20 contemporary Hungarian artists, mostly working with textile, decided to revive this art form as well as their national past.
    • The Hungarian language is very beautiful, but it is totally different from those of our neighbours.
    • The Hungarian language constitutes one of the most significant national symbols.
    • They found that the church served as an important social meeting point and was an institution where the Hungarian language was still valued.
    • Local archives house valuable deeds documenting the glory of the mediaeval city, which has witnessed the coronation of 11 Hungarian kings and eight regal wives.
    • Originally of Hungarian stock, she was born into a wealthy Viennese family in the 1920s, educated all over the place, including three years at an English boarding school, which she adored.
    • In fact the whole group of migrant workers could be sacked on the spot, because, he had learned, another 400 Hungarian workers were on the way to take their place.
    • In the past five years, Hungarian pet food producers have increased their exports by more than fourfold, from about $55 million in 1999.
    • ‘I thought Hungarian food was wonderful,’ I said consolingly.
    • However, this will only be useful for Hungarian language websites aimed at Hungarian readers.
    • The victim was a 20-year-old Hungarian au pair, with whom he had formed a non-sexual relationship after he met her through a colleague.
    • But, in exile in London, these radically dissimilar writers met to speak their shared language and to exchange reminiscences of Hungarian food and Hungarian music.
    • He is, however, a student of the Hungarian language.
    • After two or three years the foreign companies moved in and instead of investing in existing industries, simply bought up Hungarian companies with a view to closing them down and buying into the market.
    • The festival includes both new and established artists, showing the diversity of Hungarian culture.
    • According to the author, the website, working on the grassroots principle, will become an important instrument for the writing of Hungarian history.
    • International athletics officials and the World Anti-Doping Agency could be on a collision course over allegations of a controversial drugs cover-up for two top Hungarian throwers.
    • The Hungarian composer carried out extensive research on the folk melodies and developed a classification system for Hungarian peasant songs.
nounˌhəNGˈɡerēənˌhəŋˈɡɛriən
  • 1A native or inhabitant of Hungary.

    匈牙利人;匈牙利侨民

    Example sentencesExamples
    • According to the national self-image, Hungarians are wine drinkers, but beer drinking is more common.
    • Why didn't those Hungarians, Czechs and Poles realise that?
    • And it's because we felt that the Hungarians had a certain black humor which translated to this particular job.
    • The Poles, the Czechs, and the Hungarians made their political choice.
    • The campaigners estimate that up to a tenth of all Europeans and a quarter of all Hungarians live or work in floodplains.
    • The Hungarians finished 8th as a team, an improvement over the 1983 World Championships.
    • Ethnic Hungarians, or Magyars, make up the majority of Hungary's 10 million people.
    • One-third of Hungarians then lived outside Hungary.
    • Germans and Hungarians seem to be about the only peoples he liked.
    • The final results in the separate events of the combined exercises showed that the Hungarians still have their hold on the pommel horse.
    • Most English people differ from Hungarians in one crucial respect.
    • At the same time, German troops, followed by Italians and Hungarians, invaded Yugoslavia.
    • There are two opposing theories as to the origin of the Magyars, or native Hungarians.
    • The only significant ethnic minorities are Slovenes, Croats, and small numbers of Czechs and Hungarians.
    • Poles, Hungarians, and ordinary Russians saw us as credible champions of their democratic aspirations.
    • His passing will be mourned by the Greeks, Croats, Hungarians, Italians and any other ethnic group you can name.
    • Any chance of the Hungarians bouncing back from that loss was shattered by events which went far beyond the disappointment of sporting defeat.
    • Whether in the end it was the Hungarians who chased the Russians out or not is debatable.
    • Trade is a two-way street and our free-trade agreements with the Poles, Czechs and Hungarians are as much an opportunity for them as for us.
    • The second was to try to beat the Hungarians at the European Championships.
    1. 1.1 A person of Hungarian descent.
      匈牙利人后裔
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Philanthropic activities among Hungarian Americans tend to be aimed at specific groups of Hungarians.
      • Some Hungarians living in Los Angeles had to give it to me.
  • 2An Ugric language, the official language of Hungary, spoken also in Romania.

    Also called Magyar
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Interestingly, as seen in the last column, despite being spoken by a nation in continental Europe, Hungarian is not an Indo-European language.
    • Finnish is one of the most isolated languages of Europe, distantly related to Hungarian and Turkish but spoken by very few non-Finns.
    • The new languages include Czech, Danish, Dutch, Greek, Hungarian, Norwegian, Polish and Swedish.
    • The songs would have to be coached by someone who knows the song style and is fluent in Hungarian, a difficult language.
    • Cox was a serious amateur philologist and had reading knowledge of the Romance languages along with Hungarian, Polish, Greek and German.
    • Compulsory language training in Hungarian was forced on Slovak children, and Hungarian became the official language.
    • Names in Finnish, Estonian, and Hungarian are omitted because they are not Indo-European languages.
    • He studied more than fifteen languages, including Hebrew, Hungarian, Arabic, and Lithuanian.
    • The emails can use a variety of different languages including English, French, Spanish and Hungarian.
    • He speaks seven languages including English, French, Italian, Dutch, Hungarian, and Romanian.
    • Estonian belongs to the Finno-Ugric linguistic group, related closely to Finnish and more distantly to Hungarian and various languages spoken in Siberia.
    • However, Dr Rogers will continue to maintain interest in the college and may write books in Hungarian.
    • Most countries in Europe have their own languages, be it Danish, Hungarian, Finnish, German, Polish, etc.
    • People say that Hungarian is the language of the future, and it always will be.
    • In the border provinces, Italian, Slovene, Croatian, Hungarian, and Czech are also spoken.
    • The English language has had an impact on how Hungarian Americans speak Hungarian.
    • The Estonian language, along with Finnish and Hungarian, is one of the few surviving languages in the Finno-Ugric group.
    • ‘Finding interpreters who can go from Hungarian into Estonian won't be easy,’ frets one official.
    • In 1920 Hungarian was spoken by three-quarters of the population, but by 1971 only one-quarter of the population could speak the language.
    • His books have been translated into several languages, including German, Dutch, French, Hungarian and Japanese.

Origin

From medieval Latin Hungarī (a name given to the Hungarians, who called themselves the Magyar) + -an.

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