Questions & Answers about Kié ez a jegy?
Kié means whose (is it?). It’s built from ki (who) + the possessive/nominalizing suffix -é, which turns a possessor into a stand‑alone word meaning X’s (one). The same -é shows up in:
- Jánosé = John’s (one)
- az enyém = mine
- az övé = his/hers
Hungarian drops the 3rd‑person present of “to be” (van/vannak) in simple equational sentences (X is Y). So Whose is this ticket? is just Kié ez a jegy? without van. You do use forms of “to be”:
- for location/existence: A jegy az asztalon van. (The ticket is on the table.)
- in other tenses: Kié volt/lesz ez a jegy? (was/will be)
They mean the same thing. Kié is the compact “whose (is it)” form. Kinek a jegye uses the dative possessor (kinek = to whom) and the possessed noun with a possessive ending (jegye = his/her ticket). Both are very common:
- Kié ez a jegy?
- Ez kinek a jegye? / Kinek a jegye ez?
Typical short answers use the -é forms:
- Az enyém. = mine
- Jánosé. = John’s
- Az övé. = his/hers You can also use a full noun phrase:
- Ez az én jegyem. = This is my ticket.
- Ez János jegye. = This is John’s ticket.
Hungarian marks plural on either the owner, the owned thing, or both:
- Whose are these tickets? → Kiéi ezek a jegyek? (plural possessed)
- Whose (plural people) is this ticket? → Kiké ez a jegy? (plural possessor)
- Whose (plural people) are these tickets? → Kikéi ezek a jegyek? Many speakers also use the safer “kinek” versions:
- Kinek a jegyei ezek? / Kiknek a jegyei ezek? Possible short answers:
- Az enyéim. = mine (plural things)
- A diákoké. = the students’ (owners are plural)
With a demonstrative (ez/az = this/that), Hungarian also uses the definite article (a/az) before the noun:
- ez a jegy = this ticket (jegy starts with a consonant → article a)
- ez az alma = this apple (alma starts with a vowel → article az) For “that”: az a jegy, az az alma. The double az in ez az alma / az az alma is normal: first is the demonstrative, second is the article.
Swap ez for az:
- Kié az a jegy? = Whose is that ticket?
- If the noun starts with a vowel: Kié az az asztal? = Whose is that table?
Use the past/future forms of “to be”:
- Past: Kié volt ez a jegy? = Whose was this ticket?
- Future: Kié lesz ez a jegy? = Whose will this ticket be?
- Kié: two syllables, stress on the first; pronounce like KEE-eh, with a long é.
- jegy: one syllable; gy is a soft palatal sound (like the “dy” in British “during” when said carefully). Roughly “yedy,” but shorter and softer at the end.