Introduce yourself – Part I.

Let’s get familiar with Rob introducing himself!

In this video, you’ll meet Rob, who introduces himself in Hungarian. You can watch the video with or without subtitles — whichever helps you more.

Take your time! Listen to the video as many times as you like until the sentences start to feel familiar. (You will also find a vocabulary list at the end of the sheet.)

Once you’re ready, open the tasks below the video. These will help you understand the text step by step and give you a chance to practice what you’ve learned.

🎧 Watch – 🧠 Understand



The translation says „I”, „my”, „they” and „me”, but I can’t see words for them in the Hungarian sentences.

None of the sample sentences mention cats!

Country names have the same ending: -ban.

Nothing about ferrets, either.

You can’t see any words in „A nevem Robert.” that would mean „am” (to be – like I am, you are, he/she is).



A nevem …My name is …
A keresztnevem …My first name is …
A családnevem …My last name is …
A becenevem …My nickname is …
keresztnévfirst name
családnévlast name
becenévnickname
élLives
élekI live
élszYou live …
született… was born …
születtemI was born …
születtélYou were born …
elváltdivorced
hajadonunmarried (woman)
nőtlenunmarried (man)
özvegywidow
egyedülállósingle
családi állapotmarital status
hobbihobby
A szabadidőmben …In my free time …
szeretek …I like …
konditerembe járnito go to the gym
deBut
mostNow
a barátaimmy friends
… -nak hívnakHe/She/It is called (they call him/her/it) ….
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PatchPhrasing

When you don’t yet have enough vocabulary or grammar to speak fully in your target language, try PatchPhrasing.

It means you speak in your native language — but replace any word or phrase you do know (or are just learning now) in the target language.

This helps you learn in context and understand the function of the word (e.g. noun, verb, tense, etc.).

Example:
“I want a piros sports car. Sooo piros like a ripe cherry.”
(piros = red — but I think you guessed that.)

It’s fun, flexible, and builds real fluency — one word at a time.