Pronunciation: A & Á

This sheet is taking a closer look at the pronunciation difference between the Hungarian “a” and “á”.
Some language learners will find this distinction easy—especially if their native language also uses both short and long vowel sounds. But for others, whose languages hardly distinguish between them, it might take some practice. In Hungarian, this difference can truly change the meaning of a word: bal (left) vs. bál (ball), kar (arm) vs. kár (damage), hat (six / he may) vs. hát (back), or hatás (effect) vs. hátas (saddle horse).



Listen to the examples below and see how much you can hear—and say!



🔊
bab (bean)
🔊
báb (puppet)
🔊
makk (acorn)
🔊
mák (poppy flower seed)
🔊
lap (sheet)
🔊
láp (marsh)
🔊
bal (left)
🔊
bál (ball)
🔊
hat (six)
🔊
hát (back)
🔊
kar (arm)
🔊
kár (harm)
🔊
al-(sub-)
🔊
áll (stands)




How to pronounce the Hungarian “a”:

The Hungarian “a” is a short, central, relaxed vowel. It doesn’t really exist in English as a standard vowel, but it’s somewhat close to the “u” in but or the “a” in sofa—especially the unstressed version.

To pronounce it:

  • Open your mouth slightly.
  • Keep your lips neutral, not rounded or stretched.
  • Relax your tongue and keep it low and central in the mouth.
  • Don’t prolong the sound—keep it short and soft.

It’s a very muffled and unstressed sound. Native Hungarians produce it effortlessly in fast speech, so it may take a bit of practice to catch and reproduce accurately.



Let’s do some practice! Listen and repeat the words with „a” only.



🎧 Say this word in Hungarian:

Recognized:


✅ Correct: 0    ❌ Incorrect: 0



Words used in this exercise:

bak buck
kap he/she gets, receives
alma apple
kappan capon
talpas soled




How to pronounce the Hungarian “á”:

The Hungarian “á” is a long, open, and strong vowel. It’s similar to the “a” in father in many dialects of English. The sound is clearer, more deliberate, and held longer than “a”.

To pronounce it:

  • Open your mouth wide—more than for “a”.
  • Keep your lips neutral, not rounded.
  • Lower your jaw slightly more than for “a”.
  • Your tongue should be low and flat, resting near the bottom of your mouth.
  • Hold the sound a bit longer than a regular short vowel—think of it as a “confident” sound.

This vowel is always stressed in Hungarian, and length matters: kar and kár mean entirely different things.



Let’s do some practice again! Listen and repeat the words with „á” only.



🎧 Say this word in Hungarian:

Recognized:


✅ Correct: 0    ❌ Incorrect: 0



Words used in this exercise:

vám customs
hám harness
szám number
hálás grateful
támlás support
kárász crucian carps




Let’s see how well you can hear the difference between “a” and “á”!
Listen to each word and decide which letter is missing.
Type the correct letter into the blank and click “Check” to see if you got it right! (The fields are not case sensitive.)






alma apple
báb puppet
bal left
bál ball
hatalmas huge
kap he/she gets, receives
kar arm a
kár harm
lap sheet
mák poppy flower seed
szám number



Good Job / Ügyes voltál!



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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.