Breakdown of A pincér, aki mellettünk áll, már hozza a számlát.
Questions & Answers about A pincér, aki mellettünk áll, már hozza a számlát.
What does aki mean here, and why not ami or amely?
aki is the relative pronoun used for people (singular), meaning who/that.
- Use aki for humans: A pincér, aki…
- Use ami/amely for things: A számla, ami/amely…
- Plural for people: akik.
- amelyik = which one (selection from a set), usually for things.
Why are there commas around aki mellettünk áll?
Can I rewrite it with a participle instead of a full relative clause?
Yes: A mellettünk álló pincér már hozza a számlát.
This adjectival form (álló) is natural and a bit more compact. The meaning is essentially the same.
Why is it áll and not van in aki mellettünk áll?
Hungarian often uses posture verbs to describe location:
- áll = is standing, ül = is sitting, fekszik = is lying.
Van is possible in some locative statements, but here mellettünk van would sound neutral or odd; mellettünk áll specifies the posture and is idiomatic.
What exactly is mellettünk?
It’s the postposition mellett (beside/next to) plus a personal suffix for us: mellett + -ünk → mellettünk.
Forms with personal endings:
- mellettem (me), melletted (you sg), mellette (him/her), mellettünk (us), mellettetek (you pl), mellettük (them).
With nouns you don’t use the suffix: a pincér mellett (next to the waiter).
What’s the difference between mellettünk, mellénk, and mellől?
- mellettünk: static location (next to us).
- mellénk: movement to a position next to us (to next to us).
- mellől: movement away from a position next to us (from next to us).
Examples: A kutya mellénk ül. / A kutya mellől elugrik.
What does már add, and where can it go?
már means already/by now. Neutral placement is before the verb phrase: már hozza a számlát.
- A pincér már hozza a számlát = he is already bringing it.
- Már a számlát hozza puts a számlát in focus: he’s already at the stage of bringing the bill (as opposed to something else).
Contrast: még = still/not yet.
Why is it hozza and not hoz?
Because the object a számlát is definite. Hungarian has two verb conjugations:
- Indefinite object: hoz (He brings a bill = Egy számlát hoz.)
- Definite object: hozza (He brings the bill = A számlát hozza.)
Does the -t in számlát mark definiteness?
Why is it számlát (with á) and not számlat?
How can present tense mean “is bringing” in English?
What word orders are natural, and what do they emphasize?
- Neutral: A pincér, aki mellettünk áll, már hozza a számlát.
- Emphasizing the object stage: A pincér, aki mellettünk áll, már a számlát hozza.
- Strong object focus: Már a számlát hozza a pincér, aki mellettünk áll.
Keep the relative clause next to its head noun (pincér).
How would this look in the plural?
Everything that needs to agree goes plural:
A pincérek, akik mellettünk állnak, már hozzák a számlát.
- akik (plural who), állnak (they stand), hozzák (they bring, definite).
Why isn’t the pronoun ő used for “he/she”?
Any pronunciation tips for tricky bits?
- Stress is always on the first syllable.
- sz = English s; s (not in this sentence) would be English sh.
- hozza has a long zz sound (not zs): roughly HOZ-za.
- Long vowels: á as in “father,” prolonged; áll has long á and a geminate ll.
Why a számlát and not az számlát?
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