Questions & Answers about A diák látja őket a kertben.
Why is it látja and not lát?
If the object is plural (őket), why isn’t the verb plural?
What exactly does őket mean, and why that form?
Could I use azokat instead of őket?
- Őket = “them” (personal pronoun), typically for people (sometimes for animals you care about).
- Azokat = “those (ones)” (demonstrative), can refer to things or people.
If you’ve been talking about specific people, őket is natural. If you mean “those ones (over there/just mentioned),” especially things, azokat fits.
Can I drop őket and just say A diák látja a kertben?
What does the -ja in látja actually mark?
It’s the 3rd person singular definite ending. Rough breakdown:
- lát = verb stem “see”
- -ja = he/she/it … [definite object]
Is the word order fixed? Could I say A diák a kertben látja őket or A diák őket látja a kertben?
All are grammatical, but word order expresses information structure (focus) in Hungarian:
- A diák látja őket a kertben. Neutral/declarative feel.
- A diák a kertben látja őket. Slight emphasis on location; common neutral variant.
- A diák őket látja a kertben. Focus on őket (“It’s them that the student sees…”).
- A kertben látja őket a diák. Focus on A kertben (“In the garden is where the student sees them.”).
The focused element sits right before the verb.
Why is it A diák and not Az diák?
Why is it a kertben and not az kertben?
What does -ben in kertben mean, and why -ben rather than -ban?
-ban/-ben is the inessive case “in.” The choice depends on vowel harmony:
- Back vowels → -ban
- Front vowels → -ben
Kert has front vowels (e), so it takes -ben: kertben = “in the garden.”
What’s the difference between kertben and kertbe?
- kertben = “in the garden” (location; static)
- kertbe = “into the garden” (movement towards; illative)
Could I leave out the article before kertben, i.e., say kertben instead of a kertben?
Yes, but it changes the meaning:
- a kertben = “in the garden” (specific garden)
- kertben = “in a garden / in gardens (in general)” (non-specific or habitual context)
Is there any special pronunciation I should know here?
- látja is often pronounced like “látya” because the t + j cluster assimilates to a sound close to Hungarian ty.
- kertben is commonly pronounced like “kerdben” due to voicing assimilation (t becomes d before b).
- Stress is always on the first syllable: A DIÁK LÁT-ja Ő-ket A KERT-ben.
Does Hungarian mark gender here?
How would the sentence change if the subject were plural?
With a plural subject you mark the verb as 3rd person plural definite:
A diákok látják őket a kertben. (“The students see them in the garden.”)
When would I use the indefinite form lát instead of látja with a plural object?
Only when the object isn’t definite. For example:
- A diák lát embereket a kertben. (“The student sees people in the garden.”) — indefinite object → lát
- A diák látja az embereket a kertben. (“The student sees the people in the garden.”) — definite object → látja
Where does negation go?
Put nem right before the verb (and it precedes any focused element if present):
- A diák nem látja őket a kertben. (“The student doesn’t see them in the garden.”)
- With focus: A diák nem őket látja a kertben. (“It’s not them that the student sees in the garden.”)
Is diák inherently definite just because it’s a person?
No. Definite vs. indefinite is about reference, not animacy. Diák is just “student.” It becomes definite with the article/demonstrative/possessor, etc.:
- egy diák = “a student” (indefinite)
- a diák = “the student” (definite)
- az a diák = “that student” (definite)
- a diák látja… vs. egy diák lát… will affect the verb form only if they are objects; here they’re subjects, so the verb’s definiteness depends on the object (őket).
Could this be interpreted as “The student can see them in the garden”?
Hungarian lát is plain “see.” To express ability, you’d add tud:
A diák látja őket a kertben. = “The student sees them…”
A diák tudja őket látni a kertben. = “The student is able to see them in the garden.” (More natural: A diák látni tudja őket a kertben.)
More from this lesson
Sign up free — start using our AI language tutor
Start learning HungarianMaster Hungarian — from A diák látja őket a kertben to fluency
All course content and exercises are completely free — no paywalls, no trial periods.
- ✓ Infinitely deep — unlimited vocabulary and grammar
- ✓ Fast-paced — build complex sentences from the start
- ✓ Unforgettable — efficient spaced repetition system
- ✓ AI tutor to answer your grammar questions