A boltban ma nincs friss kenyér.

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Questions & Answers about A boltban ma nincs friss kenyér.

What does A boltban mean grammatically, and why is there an -ban ending?

bolt = shop/store.
-ban/-ben is the inessive case, meaning in(side) something. So boltban literally means in a shop / in the shop.

Which one you use depends on vowel harmony:

  • bolt has a back vowel (o), so it takes -banboltban
  • With front vowels you often get -ben (e.g., kertben = in the garden)

Why is there a definite article A before boltban?

A is the Hungarian definite article (the).
So A boltban = in the shop (a specific shop, or “the shop” that’s understood from context).

Hungarian often uses the definite article in places where English might omit it, especially with familiar locations (like “at the shop”).


Why is it A and not Az?

Hungarian has two forms of the:

  • a before a consonant
  • az before a vowel

boltban starts with b (a consonant), so it’s A boltban.


What is nincs, and why isn’t it written as nem van?

nincs means there isn’t / there aren’t / is not available / does not exist (here), depending on context.

Hungarian does not normally negate van (there is) as nem van in everyday standard usage for simple “there isn’t” statements. Instead, it uses the special negative form:

  • van = there is
  • nincs = there isn’t

So nincs friss kenyér = there is no fresh bread.


Does nincs agree with singular/plural? How would “there aren’t fresh breads” work?

nincs is used with singular nouns, and nincsenek with plural nouns:

  • nincs kenyér = there is no bread
  • nincsenek zsemlék = there are no rolls

Here kenyér is typically treated as an uncountable/mass noun, so nincs is natural.


Why is there no article before friss kenyér?

In Hungarian, especially in negative existence sentences with nincs, it’s very common to use the noun phrase without an article:

  • nincs friss kenyér = there is no fresh bread

You can add an article in some contexts, but it changes the feel/meaning. Without an article, it sounds like a general “none available” statement.


What case is kenyér in after nincs? Shouldn’t it be accusative?

After nincs, the noun is typically in the nominative (basic dictionary form), not the accusative:

  • Nincs kenyér. (nominative) Not: Nincs kenyeret.

Accusative -t is used when something is a direct object of a verb like “buy/eat/see,” but nincs is an existential/availability construction rather than a normal transitive verb here.


Why is the word order A boltban ma nincs friss kenyér? Could it be rearranged?

Hungarian word order is flexible and is strongly guided by focus and emphasis.

This version foregrounds the location first:

  • A boltban (in the shop) → sets the scene Then time:
  • ma (today) Then the main statement:
  • nincs friss kenyér (there’s no fresh bread)

Other common orders are also correct, with different emphasis, for example:

  • Ma nincs friss kenyér a boltban. (emphasis on today)
  • Friss kenyér nincs ma a boltban. (emphasis on fresh bread: “Fresh bread—there isn’t any…”)

What part of speech is ma, and where can it go in the sentence?

ma is an adverb meaning today. It can appear in several positions, but its placement affects emphasis.

Examples:

  • Ma nincs friss kenyér. = Today there is no fresh bread.
  • A boltban ma nincs friss kenyér. = In the shop, today there is no fresh bread.
  • A boltban nincs ma friss kenyér. = In the shop there is, today, no fresh bread (slightly more contrastive/emphatic).

Is there a hidden “there is” in Hungarian? Where is the verb “to be”?

In the present tense, Hungarian often doesn’t use a separate “to be” verb the way English does.

For existence/availability it uses:

  • van = there is
  • nincs = there isn’t

So the sentence already contains the relevant “be/exist” verb-like element: nincs.


How do I pronounce nincs and friss? Anything tricky?

A couple of common points:

  • nincs: the cs is a single sound like English ch in church. So it’s roughly neench (but with a short i).
  • friss: ss is pronounced like a strong sh? (No—Hungarian s is sh, but ss is just a longer version of that sound.) So friss is roughly frish (with Hungarian s = English sh).

Also, Hungarian stress is usually on the first syllable: BÓLTban, NINCS, FRISS, KEnyér.