Submitted by kefirdrinker69 t3_z41ft1 in pittsburgh

Been very interested in the language and culture after spending some time in the country. I also recently learned that I can gain citizenship if I reach an intermediate level.

I know this is very specific and probably a long shot given I’m no longer a student and can’t take advantage of courses at Pitt, but I wanted to know if anyone knew of tutors or language learning groups for Hungarian.

Köszi!

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undercookedchimken t1_ixor8sp wrote

i can’t help you with anything local, but i can recommend checking out the duolingo app/website.

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ejcpc17888 t1_ixoryxs wrote

You may want to look into joining OLLI at Pitt and auditing classes. While not free, the classes would be top notch.

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MissHyacinth21 t1_ixosbhu wrote

Pre-pandemic CLP used to have language classes in lots of different languages. Maybe you could request Hungarian from them?

There are lots of cool little grocery stores around the city. If you can find a Hungarian one, maybe ask there?

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Lurky_Murky_Rainbow t1_ixosmcj wrote

Thr Carnegie Library has language learning materials and online programs. And at no cost with a library card. They might know of classes.

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Elouiseotter t1_ixostq7 wrote

Try contacting a Hungarian social club or church. There are a few different ones in the greater Pittsburgh area. They would probably know where you can get local lessons.

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sqqueen2 t1_ixoy3in wrote

I can say "Good morning" and "Good evening" passably in Hungarian. Learned them from the guy who did the glassware stock when I was an undergraduate at the U of Rochester back in the 70s. Blew the mind go a Hungarian customer once. That was fun.

I have no help to offer, but Good luck!

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MiniRems t1_ixpd414 wrote

We had a Hungarian student exchange student when I was in high school. We taught him all the best curse words in english, he taught us how to swear in Hungarian. It was over 25 years ago, and I can't remember any of it, though.

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Rankerqt t1_ixpwad4 wrote

Hey I am Hungarian dm me if you want

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TheAtaraxia t1_ixq5b6u wrote

Not language but food — make sure you have dinner at Huszar if you haven’t been there yet!

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DelphicWoodchuck t1_ixq9ss0 wrote

This isn't rooted directly in Pittsburgh but from my own experience the following are helpful:

r/languagelearning

r/language_exchange

r/hungarian

I studied and am at a reasonable level with French just using online resources and communities. It isn't necessary with French, but it may be with Hungarian.

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AostaV t1_ixqbfj4 wrote

I’ve heard the language of the Magyars is one of hardest European languages to learn. good luck!

It’s actually related to Finnish, Lappish, and Estonian which is odd considering they are all pretty far apart.

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ParamedicCareful3840 t1_ixr8dt8 wrote

I am in the same boat, my grandfather was born in Hungary, I even paid a genealogist to get his birth certificate, but I honestly don’t want anything to do with Orban’s government (especially if Hungary is kicked out of the EU) so I am putting that on hold and looking at Slovakia and the Czech Republic (other side of the family) as they are doing something similar (and the language isn’t a requirement)

Anyway, the American Hungarian Library in NYC has language courses online. Hungarian is a very hard language to learn, it’s not really related to any other language (closest is Finnish). It doesn’t sound like you think it should, I have been to Hungary and it’s just so hard to even try and relate what you hear to what you read (like on the subway).

https://www.hungarianlibrary.org

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magentaapplesauce t1_ixsr9u0 wrote

This would be my only suggestion. I took Hungarian at Pitt for a few years, though I don't think the professor is there anymore. I imagine the class size would be small (I was in a class of two, and then one), and I imagine the quality would be just as good.

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kefirdrinker69 OP t1_ixuaa61 wrote

Yeah I’m aware it’s hard, I was in Budapest for around 6 weeks. I know how it sounds phonetically - I was able to memorize all of that and some basic phrases but I think it could be a fun challenge to actually get to a decent level with the language

What is the Slovak citizenship opportunity you found? I looked into that too (family is actually from Slovakia but Hungary will issue citizenship for ancestors from Austria-Hungary) and it says you need to establish residency for 6 months from what I saw.

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noondi34 t1_ixv0e4v wrote

I went through the naturalization process as you are. I am taking the oath in LA next month. I know Cleveland State University has online Hungarian classes. Let me more if you have questions.

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