Primátusát
Primátusát is a Hungarian linguistic form built from primátus, the word for primacy or supremacy. The expression is used to refer to the primacy of a subject, institution, or principle within a given system, typically in a context where the primacy is being specified with respect to another entity. In practice, it translates roughly to “its primacy” or “the primacy of X.”
Primátus originates from Latin primatus and has been adopted into Hungarian to denote the concept of leading
The term is common in formal or scholarly prose across several fields:
- In constitutional and political discourse, one might speak of the primátus of the constitution over ordinary
- In international law, discussions may address the primátusát of international norms over domestic legal orders (nemzetközi
- In religious and ecclesiastical contexts, discussions about the primacy of the Pope or a primatial see
Common example phrases include az egyház primátusát, a pápa primátusát, and a nemzetközi jog primátusát.
Primátusát is used to emphasize hierarchy, precedence, or supervisory authority within a system. It appears mainly