megvan
Hungarian
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Pronunciation
[edit]Verb
[edit]megvan
- (intransitive) to exist, to be accessible (e.g. a copy of a book)
- Synonyms: elérhető, hozzáférhető, kapható, rendelkezésre áll
- (intransitive) to be at hand, to have (the thing had is in the nominative case)
- Synonyms: nála van, a birtokában van
- Megvan a kocsi? ― You got the car?
- (intransitive) to be found (something one has been looking for)
- Synonyms: előkerült, megkerült, megtaláltam
- (intransitive) to have gotten/caught someone, gotcha
- Synonym: elkaptalak
- (intransitive) to be ready, to be done (with something: -val/-vel)
- (intransitive) to be over with something -val/-vel
- Synonyms: lezajlik, megtörténik, végbemegy
- (intransitive) to have reached something, to have succeeded in achieving something (e.g. passing an exam)
- (intransitive) to be (doing) okay, all right, not too bad (in terms of health)
- (intransitive) to get along, get on (well) with someone (-val/-vel)
- (intransitive) to be at least as much/many and perhaps more (as a result of a division in mathematics or estimating the age of someone or something)
- (intransitive) to manage, do without (the thing not really lacked: nélkül)
- Synonyms: elvan, elboldogul
Usage notes
[edit](to be at hand, to have): The subject of certain verbs is not someone who acts but a stimulus that prompts sensory or emotional feelings, like when things interest someone, matter to someone, please someone or appeal to someone. In these cases, the experiencer can take the accusative (e.g. interest) or the dative (e.g. appeal). The experiencer is expressed with the dative in the case of hiányzik (“to be missing or missed by someone”), ízlik (“to taste good”), kell (“to be needed, necessary, or required”), tetszik (“to be appealing”), and van/megvan (“to be had, to be owned by someone”).
If the experiencer is expressed with the accusative, third-person objects (him, her, it, or them) are considered definite, while first- and second-person objects (me, us, and you), indefinite. For example, the verb érdekel can take the definite form érdekli őt (“he/she is interested”, literally “it interests him/her”) or the indefinite form érdekel engem/téged/minket (“I am, you are, we are interested”, literally “it interests me, you, us”). The form érdekellek means “you are interested in me” (literally, “I interest you”). — Similar verbs include zavar (“to be bothered by”) and izgat (“to be intrigued by”).[1]
Conjugation
[edit]1st person sg | 2nd person sg informal | 3rd person sg, 2nd person sg formal |
1st person pl | 2nd person pl informal | 3rd person pl, 2nd person pl formal | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Indicative Mood | Present | Indefinite | megvagyok | megvagy | megvan | megvagyunk | megvagytok | megvannak |
Definite | intransitive verb, definite forms are not used | |||||||
Past | Indefinite | megvoltam | megvoltál | megvolt | megvoltunk | megvoltatok | megvoltak | |
Definite | ― | |||||||
Future | Indefinite | megleszek | megleszel | meglesz | megleszünk | meglesztek | meglesznek | |
Definite | ― | |||||||
Conditional Mood | Present | Indefinite | meglennék or megvolnék |
meglennél or megvolnál |
meglenne or megvolna |
meglennénk or megvolnánk |
meglennétek or megvolnátok |
meglennének or megvolnának |
Definite | ― | |||||||
Past | Indefinite | meglettem volna | meglettél volna | meglett volna | meglettünk volna | meglettetek volna | meglettek volna | |
Definite | ― | |||||||
Subjunctive Mood | Present | Indefinite | meglegyek | meglégy or meglegyél |
meglegyen | meglegyünk | meglegyetek | meglegyenek |
Definite | ― | |||||||
Infinitive | meglenni | meglennem | meglenned | meglennie | meglennünk | meglennetek | meglenniük | |
Other nonfinite verb forms |
Verbal noun | Present participle | Past participle | Future part. | Adverbial part. | Potential | ||
meglét | meglevő or meglévő | megvolt | megleendő | megléve or meglévén | meglehet |
Derived terms
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ See also Verbs and adjectives that behave differently (in English vs. in Hungarian), Által (’By’), on the past participles derived from such verbs, On verbs of emotion, with special regard to their aspectual properties, especially the chart on page 3. In addition, see Thematic relation and Theta role in Wikipedia.
Further reading
[edit]- megvan in Bárczi, Géza and László Országh. A magyar nyelv értelmező szótára (“The Explanatory Dictionary of the Hungarian Language”, abbr.: ÉrtSz.). Budapest: Akadémiai Kiadó, 1959–1962. Fifth ed., 1992: →ISBN