Breakdown of A tanár fontos információt ad.
Questions & Answers about A tanár fontos információt ad.
A is the definite article in Hungarian, meaning the.
- A tanár = the teacher
- You use a before words that start with a consonant.
- You would use az before words starting with a vowel: az orvos (the doctor).
Hungarian usually uses a definite article where English uses the, so A tanár fontos információt ad. literally starts with The teacher…
Hungarian nouns generally do not mark gender. Tanár simply means teacher, without specifying male or female.
If you really need to specify:
- férfi tanár = male teacher
- női tanár or tanárnő = female teacher (tanárnő is a common word for a female teacher)
In most cases, tanár alone is used, and the gender is either irrelevant or understood from context.
The -t ending marks the accusative case (direct object) in Hungarian.
- információ = information (dictionary form)
- információt = information as a direct object (something you give, get, read, etc.)
In this sentence:
- A tanár = the teacher (subject)
- fontos információt = important information (direct object)
- ad = gives
So információt tells you what is being given.
In Hungarian, attributive adjectives (adjectives placed before a noun) do not change for case or number. Only the noun takes the case ending.
So:
- fontos információ = important information (dictionary form)
- fontos információt = important information (as object, accusative)
Notice:
- The -t goes on információt, not on fontos.
- fontos stays the same.
Adjectives only take endings when they stand alone as nouns, e.g.:
- Fontosat ad. = He/She gives something important.
Here fontosat (important-one) behaves like a noun and gets -t.
Hungarian often omits the indefinite article egy when the object is non-specific or generic, especially with abstract or mass nouns.
- A tanár fontos információt ad.
= The teacher gives (some) important information.
If you say:
- A tanár egy fontos információt ad.
that suggests one specific important piece of information, a bit like “the teacher gives one important piece of information”.
So without egy, it’s more like “important information in general” or “some important information.”
Hungarian treats információ similarly to English information as a kind of mass / abstract noun, and it is usually used in the singular when talking in general.
- fontos információt ad ≈ gives important information
You could use the plural form információkat:
- fontos információkat ad = gives important pieces of information / many important bits of information
But for the general idea of “important information,” információt (singular) is natural.
Ad is the 3rd person singular present tense form of the verb adni, which means to give.
- ad = he/she/it gives
(or is giving, depending on context; Hungarian doesn’t have a separate continuous tense)
A small part of the conjugation (indefinite objects) is:
- adok – I give
- adsz – you give (singular, informal)
- ad – he/she/it gives
- adunk – we give
- adtok – you give (plural)
- adnak – they give
Hungarian verbs have two main conjugations: indefinite and definite.
Which one you use depends on whether the object is definite or indefinite.
In this sentence:
- fontos információt is indefinite (some important information, not a specific, known piece).
- So the verb uses indefinite conjugation: ad.
If the object is definite (specific, known), you use adja:
- A tanár az információt adja.
= The teacher is the one who gives the information (that specific information).
So:
- ad → with an indefinite object (fontos információt)
- adja → with a definite object (az információt, azt, azt az információt, etc.)
The sentence is:
- A tanár fontos információt ad.
A rough structural breakdown:
- A tanár = subject (the teacher)
- fontos információt = object (important information)
- ad = verb (gives)
Hungarian word order is flexible and driven by focus (what you want to emphasize), not by a strict SVO rule.
- Neutral-ish version:
A tanár fontos információt ad.
– A teacher gives important information. (normal statement)
You can also say:
- Fontos információt ad a tanár.
This can put a bit more emphasis on fontos információt (it’s important information that the teacher gives).
In general:
- The element immediately before the verb gets emphasis/focus.
- Here, fontos információt stands right before ad, so the informational content (important information) is what is naturally highlighted.
To negate a Hungarian verb in the present tense, you put nem (not) before the verb (and before the focused element if there is one).
Two natural options:
A tanár nem ad fontos információt.
= The teacher does not give important information.If you strongly want to negate the importance:
A tanár fontos információt nem ad.
= The teacher is not giving important information (maybe gives information, but not important).
Position of nem slightly changes what is felt to be negated or emphasized.
Hungarian does not have a separate continuous tense like is giving.
The simple present ad can correspond to:
- gives
– A general, habitual action:
A tanár fontos információt ad. = The teacher (generally) gives important information. - is giving
– A present, ongoing action, depending on context:
In the right context, the same sentence could mean The teacher is giving important information (right now).
The exact English tense is chosen from context, not from extra verb forms in Hungarian.
Pronunciation tips:
- Stress is always on the first syllable of each word:
- A TÁ-nár FON-tos in-for-MÁ-ci-ót ad
- Long vowels are really long:
- á in tanár and információt
- ó in információt
Approximate sounds:
- á – like a long “a” in “father”, but held longer.
- ó – like a long “o” in “go”, held longer.
- Final -t in információt and ad is clearly pronounced.
Altogether, say it smoothly as:
A TAN-ár FON-tos in-for-MÁ-ci-ót ad.
Yes, Hungarian often omits subject pronouns or even noun subjects when they are clear from context.
- Fontos információt ad.
= He/She gives important information.
(Or possibly: It gives important information, if the subject is something like a text, a sign, a video, etc.)
The verb ending ad tells you it’s 3rd person singular, but it doesn’t tell you who exactly. If that’s already known in the conversation, you don’t need to say A tanár again.