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Topic: Hungarian cs


  
  Doug Jones's DEC PDP-8 Index
A largely PAL-8 compatable cross assembler, Written in C, it is quite portable, and it produces either RIM or BIN format output.
It is written in C, and it has been run under AIX, Solaris, and BSD UNIX, Linux and the Windows NT Posix environment.
Varga Akos Endre's collection is heavy on PDP-11 and VAX systems, but has interesting coverage of Hungarian clones from the cold war era, including some documentation for the TPA series of PDP-8, PDP-11 and VAX clones.
www.cs.uiowa.edu /~jones/pdp8   (957 words)

  
  Hungarian name - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Modern Hungarian orthography is slightly different (simpler) than that of 18th or 19th century, but many Hungarian surnames retain their historical spelling.
Hungarian names follow the "western" custom, using given name and family name.
Modern Hungarian female names can be complicated, because if a woman marries, she has seven possibilities.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Hungarian_name   (320 words)

  
 List of English words of Hungarian origin - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
cs dz dzs gy ly ny sz ty zs
In Hungarian, the word szablya is derived from the verb szabni which means to cut.
From the name of the famous Hungarian wine, tokaji aszú that is derived from Tokaj, the centre of the local wine-growing district Tokaj-Hegyalja.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/List_of_English_words_of_Hungarian_origin   (226 words)

  
 Hungarian Translation - Translate Hungarian Language Translator
Hungarian is generally believed to a member of the Ugric languages, a sub-group of the Finno-Ugric languages, which are a branch of the Uralic languages.
Hungarian language has been claimed to be closely related to Hunnish, as Hungarian legends and histories show the close ties between the two peoples, and both the Huns and the modern day Hunnish people (Sz kely) lived in Hungary.
Hungarian distinguishes between long and short vowels, where the long vowels are written with accents, and between long consonants and short consonants, where the long consonants are written double.
www.translation-services-usa.com /languages/hungarian.shtml   (1596 words)

  
 [No title]
Hungarian is one of the Finno-Ugric languages, which include Finnish, Estonian, and a number of languages spoken in Russia.
The many vowel sounds in Hungarian are indicated by acute accents, umlauts, and the unique double acute accent which appears over o (i.e bör, rhymes with fur and means skin) and u (i.e fü, rhymes with lew and means grass).
The Hungarians concluded a compromise with the Habsburgs.
www.scripps.edu /~arvai/hungarian.html   (753 words)

  
 CS 245: Hungarian Notation Quick Reference
Hungarian is a naming convention for identifiers in code, especially, but not exclusively, the C++ and Java languages.
C is used heavily in Microsoft's Foundation Classes but using just a capital first letter is emphasized by Microsoft's J++.
At first glance, identifiers using Hungarian Notation appear to be gibberish until the pattern is deduced.
www.cse.iitk.ac.in /users/dsrkg/cs245/html/Guide.htm   (881 words)

  
 ChessBase.com - Chess News - Peter Ács — we stand corrected
In your news story on the match between Hungarian GM Peter Acs and the computer program Schredder you wrote: "Acs (pronounced "oks") is 22 years old and at Elo 2606 Hungary's number four player...".
Note that it was not spoken by a native speaker, and Hungarian readers might think it is a Trans-Danubian dialect or some other folk diction, specific to the Szatmar or Bihar region.
The Hungarian language belongs to the Ugric subgroup of the Uralic family of languages.
www.chessbase.com /newsdetail.asp?newsid=1209   (1165 words)

  
 Untitled Document
Hungarian is spoken by about 10 million people in Hungary, 1½ million in Rumania, and smaller minorities in Yugoslavia and Slovakia.
As may be gathered from these facts, the original Hungarian people came from Asia, having long lived a nomadic life on the eastern slopes of the Urals.
The alphabet, however, is phonetic, with s pronounced sh (e.g., sör—beer), c pronounced ts (ceruza—pencil), sz pronounced 5 (szó—word), cs pronounced ch (csésze—cup), zs pronounced zh (zseb—pocket), and gy pronounced dy (nagy—big).
www.mdtranslate.com /languages/hungarian_language.php   (330 words)

  
 The Hungarian Writing System
The Hungarian writing system is based on the Latin alphabet and contains a total of 44 letters when including the q, w, x, and y, which are only found in foreign words.
Hungarian’s orthography began to stabilize in the 16th Century as more and more books were published in the language.
The additional letters in the Hungarian alphabet are vowels with acute accents (á,é,í,ó,ú), the diereses ö, ü, ő, and ű, and the two-letter consonants cs, gy, ly, ny, ty, sz, zs.
www.globalisationpartners.com /Translation_Services/Hungarian/HTML/The_Hungarian_Writing_System.html   (161 words)

  
 SHP Article 31:3_3
The Hungarian postal authorities, realizing the facts of Fiume's population mix and its geographic separation from Hungary, never disputed the validity of these stamps as being those of a successor state.
Also, the Hungarian Red Army had achieved military victories against the Czech in the north, contributed to the establishment of the Slovak Republic of the Councils, and was mobilizing to face the Rumanians moving into the Great Hungarian Plain.
Hungarian and Austrian postage remnants, having lost their postal validity on 28 February 1919, were collected and overprinted by Czech postal authorities in Prague.
www.hungarianphilately.org /articles/article31_3_3.htm   (4022 words)

  
 Hungarian Gypsy Music: Whose Heritage?   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-21)
The Hungarian instrumental dance music of the early 19th century--so-called "verbunkos" music--along with Hungarian popular songs ("magyar n?ta" in Hun garian) and the cs?rd?s, are referred to even by Hungarians themselves using one word, cig?nyzene (Gypsy music), if a Gypsy band happens to be playing them.
This music--which is part of Hungarian culture--is generally thought of as their own musical idiom by Gypsies, in much the same way as most Gypsies in Hungary think of Hungarian as their native language.
The folk-based popular music--the Hungarian n?ta (slow lyrical air) and the cs?rd?s--the music of the masses considered to be the typical Hungarian musical idiom from the middle of the 19th century--was, like the earlier verbunkos music, also mainly the work of Hungarian amateurs.
www.cartage.org.lb /en/themes/Arts/music/Ethnomusic/Ethoworld/Gypsy/Hungarian.htm   (3432 words)

  
 languagehat.com: BECS.
The cs for 'ch' is just one of many oddball spellings that date back to medeival times when Magyar was being written by latin educated clergymen.
What is interesting is that Hungarian is a very conservative language - it doesn't change at a fast rate, and subsequently doesn't have a wide range of dialects.
cs, zs, and sz are all consistent in hungarian in that the first indicates voicing and the second element indicates whether it's palatized or not.
www.languagehat.com /archives/001205.php   (1225 words)

  
 German genealogy: Guide to Eastern European Languages
S in Hungarian is pronounced as English "sh", whereas "sz" in Hungarian is pronounced "s".
CS in Hungarian is pronounced as "ch" in English.
Final Y in Hungarian is not pronounced if it is in any of these combinations: "-gy", "-ly", "-ny" or "-ty", where it instead palatalizes the preceding consonant.
www.genealogienetz.de /reg/ESE/sprache.html   (485 words)

  
 [No title]
The Hungarian language has % suffixes instead of prefixes, and each suffix has several forms which must % follow the vowel harmony of the word it is suffixed to.
In Hungarian, however, the % decimal point is denoted by a comma instead of a dot, but typing % \verb+$-12,34$+ yields ``$-12,34$'' with too much space after the comma, % because the comma is punctiation rather than an ordinary character.
It is common in Hungarian article collections to have the notes % of the author numbered in arabic (by \cs{footnote}), and the footnotes of % the editor added with asterisks (by \cs{editorfootnote}).
www.math.bme.hu /latex/dl/magyar.dtx   (11077 words)

  
 Hungarian Pronunciation Guide
In Hungarian, the length of the vowel is always indicated.
Hungarian follows rules of "vowel harmony." Front vowels are: e, ö, and ü.
The general rule is that words have to have either all front vowels or all back vowels, with no mixing allowed.
www.phantomranch.net /folkdanc/alphabet/hungarian.htm   (202 words)

  
 BBC Education - Languages
Hungarian is part of the Ugrian subgroup of Uralic languages, and so is not part of the Indo-European family tree.
Hungarian uses the Latin alphabet, with diacritics on vowels, as in á, é, í, ó, ú, ö, ü, ő, ű.
The first recorded Hungarian words are personal and place names quoted in foreign sources, including Arabic, Greek and Byzantine, from the 10th century.
www.bbc.co.uk /languages/european_languages/languages/hungarian.shtml   (171 words)

  
 [No title]   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-21)
Postings may be in either English or Hungarian, but posters should bear in mind, regardless of which language they post, that some readers may not be able to read/translate your postings.
While most Hungarian Usenetters understand also English (maybe not as well), Hungarian writers are encouraged to use their native tongue when the topic is likely to concern Hungarians only (such as questions regarding local communities or things like ethnic cuisine).
Hungarian writers are encouraged to use their native tongue when the topic is likely to be of interest to Hungarian speakers only (such as questions regarding local communities or things of domestic significance).
www.faqs.org /usenet/news.announce.newgroups/soc/soc.culture.hungarian   (4327 words)

  
 Introduction to the Hungarian language
Hungarian is a very nice language, so it's worth learning it, even if it is very hard to do.
The ancient Hungarian language is expected to be between the Sumerian dialects EME-KU and EME-SAL.
The Hungarian language is "additive" which means that we meld some letters to the end of the word.
impulzus.sch.bme.hu /info/magyar.shtml   (1510 words)

  
 Hungarian Names 101
The Hungarian crown passed by marriage to the Neapolitan branch of the House of Anjou, which strengthened relations between Hungary and its Italian neighbors.
Since most Hungarian official documents were written in Latin, records of the 14th to 17th century frequently include names written in standard European order, even when the name elements themselves were Hungarian.
Most of our records of Hungarian feminine given names come from the 16th century, and are combined with bynames in the same general patterns of construction as masculine names.
www.sca.org /heraldry/laurel/names/magyarnames1012.html   (3270 words)

  
 Hungary   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-21)
According to the Hungarian Constitution, the flag of Hungary is a red-white-green tricolor.
An Hungarian flag with the coat of arms only on the white stripe in a photo taken in the Pentecostal Festival in Csíksomlyó (part of Miercurea-Ciuc/Csíkszereda city) in 2001.
In 1§ it prescribes that Hungarian sea-going (!) merchant vessels shall (1) hoist the r-w-g tricolour in (2) ratio 2:3 and that they (3) may not use "mast ribbons" (whatever is meant by that).
www.crwflags.com /fotw/flags/hu.html   (2833 words)

  
 [No title]
According to B.Malmberg, the changes of Latin pt, ct, and cs in the Romance languages are the result of a tendency towards an open syllable.
(c) the use of a possessive article with the possessive determiners when these are used without a noun: Rum.
(c) In the background of these changes of meaning are also universal, generally human ways of thought and association, the socio-cultural and historical characteristics of the speakers, as well as general psychological aspects.
www.hungarian-history.hu /lib/dunay/dunay04.htm   (4761 words)

  
 Hungarian Collections
The exact size of the Hungarian holdings is not known, since, like other country/language holdings, they have no separate catalogue and are dispersed within the rest of the collections.
Most Hungarian authors are represented by their standard collected edition and many of the first edition of their single works.
From the 1950s, however, Hungarian publications of research value in the humanities and social sciences and the history of sciences have been received on a broad scale through purchase and exchanges with principal Hungarian libraries.
www.bl.uk /collections/easteuropean/hungarian.html   (1177 words)

  
 PROTO-MAGYAR TEXTS FROM THE MIDDLE OF 1st MILLENIUM?
Also, the matter is not an internal Hungarian one: as you will see, Armenian language and culture is heavily involved, plus Uralic linguistics too.
However a special Magyar (and Slovakian; so Hungarian) trick is to indicate the length via primes.
This is the usual lazy Hungarian answer if somebody gets an idea: it is easier not to do anything and for reason you can tell that some hallucination misdirected the guy as a mirage in a desert.
www.rmki.kfki.hu /~lukacs/DETREHUN.htm   (6176 words)

  
 The Hungarian Quarterly, VOLUME XL * No. 153 * Spring 1999 - András D. Bán
He assured Churchill that Hungarians believed in the victory of Great Britain and the Allies, and claimed that it was only a British victory that could assure peace and freedom to Europe and the world, an eventuality which would allow Hungarians a say in the shaping of their own future.
The Hungarian Quarterly, the predecessor of this journal—corresponding in English to the Nouvelle Revue de Hongrie—was founded in 1936 by The Hungarian Quarterly Society, headed by Count István Bethlen, a former Prime Minister.
He met Hungarians north of the Danube, crossed the bridge at Esztergom, walked to Budapest, and rode a horse, lent to him by a Hungarian aristocrat, across the Great Plain, the Alföld, to the border, moving on into Transylvania.
www.hungarianquarterly.com /no153/030.html   (4936 words)

  
 Tsar - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In the Byzantine period the title Caesar (in Greek Kaisar) ceased to imply imperial association or the promise of succession to the throne, and after the Komnenian reforms, it was outranked by new titles such as despotēs and sebastokratōr.
The word is thus cognate with German Kaiser, Gothic káisar, Dutch keizer, Danish kejser, Swedish kejsare, Norwegian keiser, and (through Slavonic) Hungarian császár.
The spelling tsar is the closest possible transliteration of the original using standard English spelling, while the scholarly transliteration is car, with the letter 'c' standing for 'ц' ('ts') in Slavic languages employing the Latin alphabet (e.g., Serbian, Czech, Polish).
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Tsar   (4498 words)

  
 NEMETHD, Dezso - CV
In: Pleh, Csaba es Lukacs, Agnes (eds.): A magyar morfologia pszicholingvisztikaja (The psycholiguistic of hungarian morphology).
Hungarian diagnostic tools of verbal working memory functions.
In In: Magyar Pszichologiai Szemle, (Hungarian Journal of Psychology), LVI.
sol.cc.u-szeged.hu /~nemethd/cv2.htm   (990 words)

  
 Distinguished Artists Series - Zoltan Kocsis (10.16.2003)
Zoltán Kocsis launched his international career at age 18 by winning the coveted Hungarian Radio Beethoven Competition and subsequently was invited to perform throughout Europe.
His international career began when he won the Hungarian Radio Beethoven Competition when he was 18.
Under his direction, the orchestra established itself at the highest level, and presented an enormously successful series in 1995 to commemorate the 50th anniversary of Béla Bartók's death.
www.92y.org /content/distinguished_artists_series_-_kocsis.asp   (1082 words)

  
 SLIDE Hungarian Notation
Hungarian Notation is a naming convention, invented by Charles Simonyi, which encodes things about a variable's type (and perhaps its intended use) in its name.
The SLIDE code uses a variation of this Hungarian for naming all of its variables and enumerated types.
Because the Hungarian Notation has been such a benefit in C++ coding, we also use it regularly in SLIDE.slf geometry description files.
www.cs.berkeley.edu /~ug/slide/pipeline/assignments/hungarian.shtml   (236 words)

  
 magyar10
Officially, Hungarian dara is seen as of Turkic origin, while darál is seen as deriving from dara.
Hungarian domb is believed to be of FU origin.
Note that the Hungarian suffix -é is not a genitival ending, as the ordinary genitive construct does not exist in Hungarian.
member.melbpc.org.au /~tmajlath/magyar10.html   (3670 words)

  
 Hungarian email pointer (Version: 0.90, Last-modified: 1995/11/21)
"Hungarian electronic resources FAQ" is a comprehensive collection dealing with email, FTP, WWW and other Internet tools; its archive name is 'hungarian-faq' (and the mail-server command to get it is shown in the example above).
Note that this document is available on the homepage for the "Hungarian electronic resources FAQ" at the HIX WWW-server.
The latter also provides access for the full FAQ via 'finger hungarian-faq@hix.mit.edu', and for this brief pointer you are reading via 'finger hungarian-faq-pointer@hix.mit.edu' (notice that you will likely need to redirect the output to a pager or a file in order to read it).
www.cs.uu.nl /wais/html/na-dir/hungarian/pointer.html   (468 words)

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