ragozásfügg
Ragozásfügg is a Hungarian term that translates to "inflectional" or "declensional" in English. It refers to a grammatical feature where words change their form to indicate grammatical relationships such as tense, mood, case, number, or person. Hungarian is a highly inflectional language, meaning that a significant amount of grammatical information is conveyed through suffixes attached to word stems. For example, nouns change their endings to show their case (e.g., nominative, accusative, dative) and number (singular or plural). Verbs are similarly inflected to indicate the subject's person and number, tense, and mood. This extensive use of inflectional morphology is a defining characteristic of Hungarian grammar, distinguishing it from more analytic languages like English, which rely more heavily on word order and auxiliary words. The complexity of Hungarian inflection can be a challenge for learners, as a single word stem can have many possible inflected forms. Understanding the system of ragozásfügg is therefore crucial for both comprehending and producing grammatically correct Hungarian.