Thanks, nice. A little clarification: barack can mean peach, and can also mean apricot. To distinguish between the two, the first is called őszibarack (autumn barack) and the second is called sárgabarack (yellow barack).
Uborka is almost same like in slovak cucumber in slovak is uhorka . Keep going you are rlly gd at hungarian im learning also and its gd to learn from you ❤
Wonderful videos you make, keep up the good work! I highly recommend you to come to Veszprém, the "City of Queens", which was the European Capital of Culture in 2023.
@@FrederikCorneliustravel Thanks Frederik. Imádom a budapesti piacokat 👍🏻🇬🇧 I recently visited the Fehérvári market and it's wonderful. You should look at the flower stalls in there , it's has an amazing colour and scent 💐🌸🌺
Szőlő actually comes from Chuvash Turkic, not Slavic. en.m.wiktionary.org/wiki/sz%C5%91l%C5%91 Also, burgonya does come from the name of that French region. Fun fact: the fok part in fokhagyma used to be written as fog, meaning wild.
I'm hungarian and it's really fun to watch you learning. Keep it up!
Thank you! Will do!
I think my favorite word is csütörtök (Thursday) because I love the way it sounds. It was hard for me to learn at first, but now I love to say it.
Yeeesss it sounds nice! Mine is ‘krumpli’ 😂 it sounds so cool
@@motivationalspeaker7145 Igen! I also enjoy the saying: sült krumpli :)
combom = my thighs
Thanks, nice. A little clarification: barack can mean peach, and can also mean apricot. To distinguish between the two, the first is called őszibarack (autumn barack) and the second is called sárgabarack (yellow barack).
Oh Mr Csallner! Thanks 🎸😍
@@FrederikCorneliustravel Or you can also say kajszi for apricot.
As a chinese hungarian new learner, I think the most difficult alphabet is "r"
I just started to learn Hungarian! Your videos are really helpful!
Köszönöm!
Glad you like them!
Uborka is almost same like in slovak cucumber in slovak is uhorka . Keep going you are rlly gd at hungarian im learning also and its gd to learn from you ❤
Thank you! I really wanna learn slovak!
A burgonya másik gyakori neve a krumpli.
Finally! More of these please!
Paprika, same in Serbian, patlidžan is close enough... Banana, mango, narandža... So I know at least 6 hugarian fruits or vegitables already 😁
padlizsan is the same as turkish
Also sargarepa😁
Wonderful videos you make, keep up the good work! I highly recommend you to come to Veszprém, the "City of Queens", which was the European Capital of Culture in 2023.
Love it
Its soooo nice, looking forward for next vidéos, do easy to study
Favourite word gyöngyharmat,
Very helpful, thanks Frederik 👍🏻Was that Hunyadi market?
Yes it was!
@@FrederikCorneliustravel Thanks Frederik. Imádom a budapesti piacokat 👍🏻🇬🇧 I recently visited the Fehérvári market and it's wonderful. You should look at the flower stalls in there , it's has an amazing colour and scent 💐🌸🌺
❤
Serbians also say šargarepa.
Yeah, they borrowed it from Hungarian.
@@davethesid8960 Yes, Hungarians also borrowed some Slavic words. It was both ways.
@@videoizazov True.
👍👍👍👍👍
👍👍👍👍👍
👍👍👍👍👍
Your pronunciation and word stress needs to be improved, it is a nice video, though.
Szőlő actually comes from Chuvash Turkic, not Slavic.
en.m.wiktionary.org/wiki/sz%C5%91l%C5%91
Also, burgonya does come from the name of that French region.
Fun fact: the fok part in fokhagyma used to be written as fog, meaning wild.
Please learn numbers and colours🥲