Comment by int_19h

4 days ago

The "weird" part about Hungarian names and words for English speakers is that "y" is a modifier letter in most cases, not a sound in and of itself. So e.g. "Nagy" is pronounced closer to something like "Nahj".

They said:

> Except when it comes to names when it gets a bit random!

The letters "gy", "ty", and "ly" are not exclusive to names, nor are they significantly more common in names.

It's not that I disagree people would struggle with these, just that it's not unique to names, so it couldn't have been what they were referring to there.

  • My implicit point was that this:

    > The only weird ones I can think of are the ones that end in -y. For example, Görgey. They're meant to be -i endings.

    is not actually surprising to an English speaker.