Talán a diák fáradt.

Breakdown of Talán a diák fáradt.

lenni
to be
diák
the student
fáradt
tired
talán
maybe
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Questions & Answers about Talán a diák fáradt.

What does talán mean, and where can it go in the sentence?
  • Talán means “maybe/perhaps,” expressing uncertainty.
  • Natural placements:
    • Talán a diák fáradt.
    • A diák talán fáradt.
    • Talán fáradt a diák. The meaning is the same; the third variant slightly foregrounds the predicate (“tiredness”).
Why is there no word for “is” here?

Hungarian drops the 3rd‑person present of “to be” (van) when the predicate is an adjective or a noun:

  • A diák fáradt. = “The student is tired.”
  • Past/future keep it: A diák fáradt volt/lesz. You must use van with locations/adverbs: A diák az iskolában van.
Can I say A diák van fáradt?

No. With an adjectival predicate in present 3rd person, van is not used. Say:

  • Correct: A diák fáradt.
  • But with place/time/adverb: A diák itt van.
What does the article a do? Could I use egy, or drop the article?
  • a = “the” (definite). A diák = “the student” (a specific one).
  • egy = “a/an” (indefinite). Egy diák fáradt. = “A student is tired.”
  • Dropping the article in this sentence is not natural: Diák fáradt is ungrammatical in standard usage.
How do I say “students are tired”?

Use the plural on both noun and predicate adjective:

  • A diákok fáradtak. With maybe: Talán a diákok fáradtak. Note: Attributive adjectives don’t take a plural ending: fáradt diákok = “tired students.”
Is fáradt an adjective or a verb form?

It’s an adjective meaning “tired” (historically a participle of fárad, “to get tired”). As a predicate:

  • Present: A diák fáradt.
  • Past/future: A diák fáradt volt/lesz.
How do I negate this? “Maybe the student is not tired.”

Use nem before the predicate adjective:

  • Talán a diák nem fáradt.
  • A diák talán nem fáradt. Don’t use nincs here; nincs negates van in existential/location contexts, not adjectives.
Is there a more explicit way to say “maybe”?

Yes: Lehet, hogy a diák fáradt. (“It may be that the student is tired.”)

  • This is slightly more explicit/neutral than talán.
  • Esetleg is mostly used in questions/suggestions: Esetleg fáradt a diák? In plain statements it can sound odd.
Can I turn it into a yes/no question?

Yes, with rising intonation:

  • A diák fáradt? = “Is the student tired?” Using talán in a direct yes/no question is uncommon; prefer Lehet, hogy a diák fáradt? or a tag: A diák fáradt, ugye?
What’s the difference between A diák fáradt and Fáradt a diák?

Both are grammatical.

  • A diák fáradt. is neutral: topic (the student) + comment (tired).
  • Fáradt a diák. puts mild emphasis on the state “tired.” With maybe: Talán fáradt a diák. is perfectly natural.
Does Hungarian mark gender here? How do I say “he/she”?
Hungarian has no grammatical gender. A diák can be male or female. If you need a pronoun, use ő (“he/she”): Talán ő fáradt.
Can this sentence be generic (“students are tired in general”)?

Hungarian can express class‑level generalizations with the singular definite article:

  • A diák fáradt. can mean “The student (as a type) is tired,” in the right context. However, talán makes a generic reading unlikely; it normally refers to a specific situation.
When do I use a vs az?

Use a before a consonant sound and az before a vowel sound:

  • a diák, a tanár
  • az orvos, az egyetem So: Talán az orvos fáradt.