National Repository of Grey Literature 2 records found  Search took 0.00 seconds. 
Paradigmatic system of Hungarian verbs
Patloka, Radek ; Tóth, István (advisor) ; Sólyom, Réka (referee)
The main results of the Hungarian verbal paradigms' analysis can be summarised as follows. 1. From the perspective of applied morphology, the Hungarian verb is always verbal-formed. 2. The verbal form in Hungarian consists of two parts: (a) stem part: absolute stem, potentially absolute stem, relative stem; (b) suffixal part: foundation of suffixes, or word-forming suffixes, grammatical characters, ending. 3. The above mentioned suffixes become attached to a stem - or to each other - either directly or using the "conjunctive vowels". I call this vowel - in terms of applied morphology and language pedagogy - a "pre-sound" with a conjunctive sound function. 4.On the basis of applied morphology knowledge and my personal experience with teaching of the Hungarian language as a foreign language, I came to a conclusion that the grammatical character of a present tense in Hungarian either does not have a real implementation, which stands for a null morpheme, or it has a real implementation in the form of non-generalized -sz. 5. I divided Hungarian verbs on the strength of their formal structure and behaviour within conjugational paradigms. Based on this, ten separate groups of non-ik verbs were identified. As far as -ik verbs are concerned, I distinguish three groups. In addition, I dedicated my thesis to a...
Paradigmatic system of Hungarian verbs
Patloka, Radek ; Tóth, István (advisor) ; Sólyom, Réka (referee)
The main results of the Hungarian verbal paradigms' analysis can be summarised as follows. 1. From the perspective of applied morphology, the Hungarian verb is always verbal-formed. 2. The verbal form in Hungarian consists of two parts: (a) stem part: absolute stem, potentially absolute stem, relative stem; (b) suffixal part: foundation of suffixes, or word-forming suffixes, grammatical characters, ending. 3. The above mentioned suffixes become attached to a stem - or to each other - either directly or using the "conjunctive vowels". I call this vowel - in terms of applied morphology and language pedagogy - a "pre-sound" with a conjunctive sound function. 4.On the basis of applied morphology knowledge and my personal experience with teaching of the Hungarian language as a foreign language, I came to a conclusion that the grammatical character of a present tense in Hungarian either does not have a real implementation, which stands for a null morpheme, or it has a real implementation in the form of non-generalized -sz. 5. I divided Hungarian verbs on the strength of their formal structure and behaviour within conjugational paradigms. Based on this, ten separate groups of non-ik verbs were identified. As far as -ik verbs are concerned, I distinguish three groups. In addition, I dedicated my thesis to a...

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