What's the difference between hungarian and hungary?

Hungarian


Definition:

  • (a.) Of or pertaining to Hungary or to the people of Hungary.
  • (n.) A native or one of the people of Hungary.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) The data of first 1000 first-born, non-malformed, mature (greater than or equal to 2500 g) offspring of participants in the Hungarian "Optimal" Family Planning Programme were evaluated.
  • (2) The different congenital abnormality entities and the components of fetal radiation syndrome did not show a higher rate after the Chernobyl accident in the data-set of the Hungarian Congenital Abnormality Registry.
  • (3) The dermatoglyphics of 709 individuals from three Hungarian populations living near each other but of different origin were analyzed.
  • (4) The normal IgE level in healthy Hungarian adults were compared to the reported normal values of other countries.
  • (5) It is the latest attack on the government from the Hungarian economist, whose previous criticism of David Cameron's "nasty" looking restrictions on benefits for foreigners led the angry prime minister to lodge a formal complaint.
  • (6) Andor, a Hungarian who studied in Manchester, is to travel to Bristol on Monday to argue his case for the benefits of labour migration within the EU.
  • (7) The paper deals with the results of the joint Soviet-Hungarian study for the determination of etiology of acute pneumonias.
  • (8) A family-building model, called FERMODA, is presented and used to check whether the available data on abortion for Hungary are consistent with Hungarian data on other aspects of family building.
  • (9) Hungary, now one of Europe’s keenest proponents of border protection, was less than a century ago part of a polyglot, multinational commonwealth, the Austro-Hungarian empire.
  • (10) Gyula Grosics played for Honvéd, the Hungarian army team created to form the core of the national side.
  • (11) Hungary’s liberals find a hero in their battle against Viktor Orbán Read more We have never sought special “privileges” that set us apart from the rest of Hungarian academic life.
  • (12) This article compares the therapeutic power used by psychiatrists and psychoanalysts serving in the German and Austro-Hungarian armies during World War I, and the ways in which their therapeutic techniques were related to governmental and military authority.
  • (13) Hungarian officials have portrayed the crisis as a defence of Europe’s prosperity, identity and “Christian values” against an influx of mainly Muslim refugees.
  • (14) The only exception is the rare show of bravado by Zsolt Nemeth, the Hungarian deputy foreign minister (also an EU official) who has advocated a Libya-style Nato intervention in Bahrain.
  • (15) Raynor, however, had shrewdly appreciated what England's tactically naive Walter Winterbottom had disastrously not; that it was Hidegkuti, in his deep-lying position, who made the Hungarian wheels turn.
  • (16) Hungarians first learned of the news from Russian websites.
  • (17) For efficient joint studies the Soviet and Hungarian methods should be unified.
  • (18) The creative self-perceptions on Something About Myself of 227 Hungarian and 672 American high school and college males and females were compared.
  • (19) The history of the Hungarian Traumatology since the 16th century up to the present days is outlined by the author.
  • (20) In the Hungarian literature no paper on the use of distally pedicled flaps was published until now.

Hungary


Definition:

  • (n.) A country in Central Europe, now a part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Substitutes: Andoni Zubizarreta (Spain), Lajos Detari (Hungary), Dragan Stojkovic (Yugoslavia), Igor Belanov (USSR), Preben Elkjær Larsen (Denmark), Lars Larsson (Sweden), Alexandre Zavarov (USSR).
  • (2) For months, more than 170,000 mainly Syrian refugees travelling north from Greece have used Hungary as a thoroughfare to the safety of northern and western Europe.
  • (3) The experience in Hungary should encourage physicians in other underdeveloped areas of the world to organize similar programs for the care of cancer in children.
  • (4) On 21 August 1968, armies of five Warsaw Pact countries – the Soviet Union, Poland, Hungary, Bulgaria and East Germany – invaded Czechoslovakia to crush democratic reforms known as the Prague spring.
  • (5) In Hungary the 1971 influenza epidemic, unlike earlier influenza A2 epidemics, started unusually early and in 2 foci.
  • (6) Yet what has been unfolding in the past 15 months or so should make even the most ardent pro-European think about an orderly mechanism for making member states exit: the euro crisis and, less obviously, Hungary's backsliding from liberal democracy to a soft form of authoritarianism, or what an American paper recently called " Lukashenko lite ".
  • (7) In Hungary, scores of migrants broke through a police line near a refugee centre and marched towards Budapest on Monday before agreeing to turn back.
  • (8) Yes, we can assign more or less responsibility – I blame Austria-Hungary and Germany for their mad determination to destroy Serbia knowing that a general war might result – but there is still plenty of room for disagreement.
  • (9) The wider use of USFM in Hungary is urged, because appropriate equipment is available while the chances of continuous hormonal monitoring are rather limited.
  • (10) The level of external dose and individual total body ingestion dose gave Hungary a rank of 70th.
  • (11) On 2 October, Hungary is due to hold a controversial referendum on the relocation plan, which involves sending 1,294 asylum seekers to Hungary.
  • (12) Survival rates for Wilms' tumor in Hungary now approximate the internationally accepted rates for these patients.
  • (13) Quantitative thermal analysis was carried out of 2300 calculi collected in Hungary.
  • (14) It is also a club in which Britain plays a leading role, and which would be unimaginable without British leadership.” Schäfer told the Guardian he was sad to see Johnson joining “a group of anti-European nationalists made up of Hungary’s prime minister, Viktor Orbán, and Front National leader Marine Le Pen”.
  • (15) And secretary of state Hillary Clinton, visiting Hungary in 2011, pleaded for “a real commitment to the independence of the judiciary, a free press, and governmental transparency”.
  • (16) In Hungary, abortion seemed to be the preferred method of family planning.
  • (17) Hungary, meanwhile, has struggled to deal with thousands of people stranded at Budapest’s main international railway station after authorities decided to stick to European Union rules and prevent refugees and migrants leaving for other countries in western Europe .
  • (18) Last year there was a bus trip from Hungary visiting, this year different prominent far-right figures stopped on their way through,” he told Oe1 public radio.
  • (19) the agitated type of involutional melancholy occurred twice as often in Canada as in Hungary, the apathetic cases were rarer in Canada, and the illness began earlier among Canadian women.
  • (20) He has been declared "a Shakespearean fool, the only one who can say what others can't" and "an antidote to the proliferation of neo-Nazi movements which took hold of Hungary and Greece".

Words possibly related to "hungarian"

Words possibly related to "hungary"