B1

Comparison in Hungarian

Fokozás

Overview

Hungarian comparison follows a simple and regular pattern: the comparative is formed with the suffix -bb (or -abb/-ebb/-obb after consonants), and the superlative adds the prefix leg- to the comparative. While the basic system is straightforward, a handful of very common adjectives have irregular comparative forms that must be memorized.

At the CEFR B1 level, learners need the comparative for everyday comparisons ("bigger," "more beautiful," "better") and the superlative for expressing extremes ("the biggest," "the best"). The comparison structure with mint (than) and mint alternatives is also essential.

Hungarian comparisons are more compact than English — no separate word like "more" is needed, since the suffix handles everything.

How It Works

Comparative: -bb

Adjective Comparative English
nagy (big) nagyobb bigger
szép (beautiful) szebb more beautiful
magas (tall) magasabb taller
gyors (fast) gyorsabb faster
könnyű (easy) könnyebb easier
drága (expensive) drágább more expensive

Superlative: leg- + comparative

Comparative Superlative English
nagyobb legnagyobb biggest
szebb legszebb most beautiful
magasabb legmagasabb tallest
jobb legjobb best

Irregular Comparatives

Adjective Comparative Superlative English
jó (good) jobb legjobb better/best
rossz (bad) rosszabb legrosszabb worse/worst
sok (many) több legtöbb more/most
kevés (few) kevesebb legkevesebb fewer/fewest
szép (beautiful) szebb legszebb more/most beautiful
könnyű (easy) könnyebb legkönnyebb easier/easiest
kicsi (small) kisebb legkisebb smaller/smallest

Comparison Structures

Structure Example English
X -bb mint Y Péter magasabb, mint Anna. Péter is taller than Anna.
X -bb Y-nál/-nél Péter magasabb Annánál. Péter is taller than Anna.
olyan...mint Olyan magas, mint Anna. As tall as Anna.
nem olyan...mint Nem olyan magas, mint Anna. Not as tall as Anna.

Examples in Context

Hungarian English Note
nagyobb bigger regular
a legnagyobb the biggest superlative with article
szebb mint more beautiful than comparison
jobb → a legjobb better → the best irregular
Péter magasabb, mint Anna. Péter is taller than Anna. mint comparison
Ez drágább annál. This is more expensive than that. -nál comparison
A legjobb film. The best film. superlative
Több könyvem van. I have more books. irregular comparative
Olyan szép, mint a nővéred. As beautiful as your sister. equality
Ez a legkönnyebb feladat. This is the easiest task. superlative

Common Mistakes

Using -bb without linking vowel

  • Wrong: magasbb
  • Right: magasabb
  • Why: Consonant-final adjectives need a linking vowel before -bb, following vowel harmony.

Forgetting leg- for superlative

  • Wrong: a nagyobb (meaning "the biggest")
  • Right: a legnagyobb
  • Why: The superlative requires the leg- prefix. Without it, you only have the comparative.

Using mint twice

  • Wrong: Magasabb mint Annánál.
  • Right: Magasabb, mint Anna. OR Magasabb Annánál.
  • Why: Use either mint + nominative or -nál/-nél, not both.

Usage Notes

Both comparison strategies (mint + nominative and -nál/-nél) are common and correct. The mint construction is slightly more common in speech. In writing, both appear equally.

The superlative always takes the definite article in Hungarian: a legjobb (the best), a legnagyobb (the biggest).

Practice Tips

  • Practice comparatives with five common adjectives and use both mint and -nál/-nél structures.
  • Memorize the irregular comparatives — they are the most frequently used ones.
  • Create superlative sentences about your preferences: A legjobb étel a pizza. A legszebb város Budapest.

Related Concepts

ความรู้พื้นฐาน

Adjective UsageA2

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