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Updated: June 7, 2025


The Hungarian differs from most European languages in its internal structure and external form. It is distinguished by harmony and energy of sound, richness and vigor of form, regularity of inflexion, and power of expression. Towards the close of the seventh century, the Magyars emigrated from Asia into Europe, and for two hundred years they occupied the country between the Don and Dneiper.

It was now discovered that the peculiar terminations or inflections by which persons are expressed throughout the verbs of nearly the whole of these languages, have their foundations in pronouns; the pronoun was simply placed at the end, and thus became an inflexion.

"The Bishop will be with us," she said, with an inflexion of pride in her tone; "he is over here just now on account of his wife's health, and has promised to take the chair." Then Malcolm signified his perfect willingness to make his Lordship's acquaintance, and to listen to any amount of speeches; and Mrs. Herrick had gone to her bed that night a happy woman.

"What!" cried Wilfrid, in despair, "can the riches of art, the riches of worlds, the splendors of a court " She stopped him by a single inflexion of her lips, and said, "Beings more powerful than you have offered me far more."

'But, Max, surely you might have told me? 'Who? I? I should not have presumed. You must remember that I was in Hamilton's confidence, and, after a moment's hesitation, 'in hers too. Ursula, with a sudden passionate inflexion in his voice, 'you have no idea how she loved that poor boy, and how she suffered: it nearly killed her.

I think I have once before spoken of her voice, an organ more often cultivated by my fair country-women for singing than for speaking, which, considering that much of our practical relations with the sex are carried on without the aid of an opera score, seems a mistaken notion of theirs, and of its sweetness, gentle inflexion, and musical emphasis.

The root-word, without inflexion, alone is used where the name is employed in no connection with a verb, where in every terrestrial language the nominative would be employed. Singular. Plural. Nominative ambâs ambaus Accusative ambâl ambaul Dative, to or in ambân ambaun Ablative, by or from ambâm ambaum

Assonance is used freely, but there is not more rhyming than is usual in the poetry of the late empire. Not only in pronunciation, but in grammatical inflexion, the beginnings of Italian here and there appear.

For 'man, or 'white' does not express the idea of 'when'; but 'he walks, or 'he has walked' does connote time, present or past. Inflexion belongs both to the noun and verb, and expresses either the relation 'of, 'to, or the like; or that of number, whether one or many, as 'man' or 'men ; or the modes or tones in actual delivery, e.g. a question or a command.

A child at play by itself will express its delight by its voice and motions; and every inflexion of tone and every gesture will bear exact relation to a corresponding antitype in the pleasurable impressions which awakened it; it will be the reflected image of that impression; and as the lyre trembles and sounds after the wind has died away, so the child seeks, by prolonging in its voice and motions the duration of the effect, to prolong also a consciousness of the cause.

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