Word
A barátom szeretne a tenger mellé menni.
Meaning
My friend would like to go to the seaside.
Part of speech
sentence
Pronunciation
Course
Lesson
Breakdown of A barátom szeretne a tenger mellé menni.
tenger
the sea
szeretni
would like
barátom
my friend
-hoz/-höz
to
mellé
beside
menni
to go
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Questions & Answers about A barátom szeretne a tenger mellé menni.
Why is barátom used instead of a barát or barát?
In Hungarian, possessive suffixes are added to nouns to show ownership or relationship. Here, barát means "friend," and the -om suffix indicates "my friend" (first-person singular possession). Therefore, barátom literally means "my friend." By using barátom, you're specifying whose friend you are talking about.
What does szeretne imply, as opposed to something like akar?
While both words can translate to "wants" in English, akar is more direct and forceful, often meaning "to want" or "to demand." The verb szeretne is the third-person conditional form of szeretnék ("I would like"), meaning your friend "would like" something, which can sound more polite or a bit softer than akar.
How does a tenger mellé differ from a tenger mellett?
In Hungarian, mellett means "next to" something in a locational sense—so a tenger mellett means "beside the sea" (staying in place). Meanwhile, mellé has a directional sense—"to beside something." So if you are saying "to go to the sea," with the idea of ending up next to it, you use mellé. In other words, mellé implies movement toward the place next to the sea, whereas mellett indicates being already next to the sea.
Why is the article a used in front of tenger?
Hungarian uses articles similarly to English when referring to specific nouns. Here, tenger (sea) is made specific by the article a ("the"), indicating "the sea" rather than just "sea" in general. This is common usage in Hungarian when mentioning a place or entity in a context where both the speaker and listener can identify it (like the sea, not just any sea).
Why do we use menni at the end of the sentence?
In Hungarian, the infinitive form of the verb—here menni ("to go")—often appears at or near the end of the clause. Word order in Hungarian can be more flexible than in English, but a common pattern is having the main verb in its infinitive form follow other elements, especially when combined with auxiliary or modal-like verbs such as szeretne.
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