The overall characteristics of the consonant
assimilation in Hungarian are the following: • Assimilation types are typically regressive, that is the last element of the cluster determines the change. • In most cases, it works across word boundaries if the sequence of words form an "accentual unity", that is there is no phonetic break between them (and they bear a common phrase stress). Typical accentual units are: • attributes and qualified nouns, e.g.
hideg tél ('cold winter'); • adverbs and qualified attributes, e.g.
nagyon káros ~ ('very harmful'); • verbs and their complements, e.g.
nagyot dob ('s/he throws long toss'),
vesz belőle ('take some [of it]'). • There are obligatory, optional and stigmatized types of assimilation. • The palatal affricates behave like stops in assimilation processes. Therefore, in this section, they will be treated as stops, including their IPA notations and .
Voice assimilation In a cluster of consonants ending in an obstruent, all obstruents change their voicing according to the last one of the sequence. The affected obstruents are the following: • In obstruent clusters, retrograde voicing assimilation occurs, even across word boundaries: : • is unusual in that it undergoes devoicing, but does not cause voicing, • only precedes a
velar consonant (e.g.
hang , 'voice'), precedes a
labiodental consonant (e.g.
hamvad , 'smolder'), and precedes
bilabial consonants. • before
labial consonants :
színpad ('stage'),
különb ('better than'),
énmagam ('myself'); • before
labiodental consonants :
különféle ('various'),
hamvas ('bloomy'); • before
palatal consonants :
pinty ('finch'),
ángy ('wife of a close male relative'),
magánnyomozó ('private detective'); • before
velar consonants :
munka ('work'),
angol ('English'); • Nasal place assimilation is obligatory within the word, but optional across a word or compound boundary, e.g.
szénpor ~ ('coal-dust'),
nagyon káros ~ ('very harmful'),
olyan más ~ ('so different').
Sibilant assimilation • Voiceless sibilants form a voiceless geminate affricate with preceding alveolar and palatal stops (
d ,
gy ,
t ,
ty ): • Clusters ending in
sz or
c give :
metszet 'engraving, segment',
ötödször 'for the fifth time',
négyszer 'four times',
füttyszó 'whistle (as a signal)';
átcipel 's/he lugs (something) over',
nádcukor 'cane-sugar'. • Clusters ending in
s or
cs give :
kétség 'doubt',
fáradság 'trouble',
egység 'unity',
hegycsúcs 'mountain-top'. • Two sibilant fricatives form a geminate of the latter phoneme; the assimilation is regressive as usual: •
sz or
z +
s gives :
egészség 'health',
község 'village, community'; •
sz or
z +
zs gives :
vadászzsákmány 'hunter's game';
száraz zsömle 'dry bread roll'; •
s or
zs +
sz gives :
kisszerű 'petty',
rozsszalma 'rye straw'; •
s or
zs +
z gives :
tilos zóna 'restricted zone',
parázs zene 'hot music'. • Clusters
zs+s ,
s+zs ,
z+sz and
sz+z are rather the subject of the voice assimilation. • If one of the two adjacent sibilants is an affricate, the first one changes its place of articulation, e.g.
malacság ,
halászcsárda 'Hungarian fish restaurant'. Sibilant affricate–fricative sequences like are pronounced the same as geminate affricate during normal speech. • Sibilant assimilation can be omitted in articulated speech, e.g. to avoid homophony:
rozsszalma ~ 'rye straw' ≠
rossz szalma 'straw of bad quality', and
rossz alma 'apple of bad quality' as well. • NB. Letter cluster
szs can be read either as
sz+s , e.g.
egészség 'health', or as
s+zs , e.g.
liszteszsák 'bolting-bag' depending on the actual
morpheme boundary. Similarly
zsz is either
zs + z , e.g.
varázszár 'magic lock', or
z + sz , e.g.
házszám 'street-number'; and
csz:
cs + z ~
c + sz . Moreover, single digraphs may prove to be two adjacent letters on morpheme boundary, like
cs:
cs ~
c + s ;
sz: sz ~
s + z ,
zs:
zs ~
z + s .
Palatal assimilation Combination of a "palatalizable" consonant and a following palatal consonant results in a palatal geminate. Palatalizable consonants are palatal ones and their non-palatal counterparts:
d ~
gy ,
l ~
ly ,
n ~
ny ,
t ~
ty . • Full palatal assimilation occurs when the ending palatal consonant is
j :
nagyja 'most of it',
adja 's/he gives it';
tolja 's/he pushes it';
unja 's/he is bored with it',
hányja 's/he throws it';
látja 's/he sees it',
atyja 'his/her father'. The cluster
lyj is a simple orthographic variant of
jj :
folyjon 'let it flow'. • Partial assimilation takes place if an alveolar stop (
d,
t) is followed by a palatal
gy ,
ty :
hadgyakorlat 'army exercises',
nemzetgyűlés 'national assembly';
vadtyúk 'wild chicken',
hat tyúk 'six hens'. • Some sources report that alveolar stops change into their palatal counterparts before
ny :
lúdnyak 'neck of a goose',
átnyúlik 'it extends over'. The majority of the sources do not mention this kind of assimilation. • When the first consonant is nasal, the partial palatal assimilation is a form of the nasal place assimilation (see above). • The full palatal assimilation is an obligatory feature in standard Hungarian: its omission is stigmatized and it is considered as a hypercorrection of an undereducated person. Partial palatal assimilation is optional in articulated speech.
Degemination Long consonants become short when preceded or followed by another consonant, e.g.
folttal 'by/with (a) patch',
varrtam 'I sewed'.
Intercluster elision The middle alveolar stops may be omitted in clusters with more than two consonants, depending on speed and articulation of speech:
azt hiszem ~ ~ I presume/guess',
mindnyájan 'one and all',
különbség ~ 'difference'. In morpheme onsets like
str- , middle stops tends to be more stable in educated speech,
falanxstratégia ~ ~ 'strategy based on
phalanxes'.
Elision of • assimilates to a following (e.g.
balra , 'to the left'). also tends to be omitted between a preceding vowel and an adjacent stop or affricate in rapid speech, causing the lengthening of the vowel or diphthongization (e.g.
volt 'was',
polgár 'citizen'). This is quite common in dialectal speech, but considered non-standard in the official language.
Hiatus Standard Hungarian prefers hiatus between adjacent vowels. However some optional dissolving features can be observed: • An optional weak glide may be pronounced within a word (or a compound element) between two adjacent vowels if one of them is
i , e.g.
fiaiéi ~ ('the ones of his/her sons'). This, however, is rarely transcribed. • Adjacent identical short vowels other than
a and
e may be pronounced as the corresponding long vowel, e.g.
zoológia ~ ('zoology'). • Adjacent double
i is always pronounced as single short in the word endings, e.g.
Hawaii . This reduction is reflected in the current orthography when the adjective-forming suffix
-i is added to a noun ending in
i. In this case suffix
-i is omitted also in writing. e.g.
Lenti (a placename) +
-i →
lenti 'of Lenti'. ==Stress==