E-Journal of the American Hungarian Educators Association

ISSN: 1936-8879

Journals / Vol 6 (2013) / 12

Hungarian gyerekestül vs. gyerekkel (‘with [the] kid’)

István Fekete Research Institute for Linguistics, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Budapest, Hungary

Abstract

The paper analyzes the various uses of the Hungarian -stUl (‘together with’, ‘along with’) sociative (associative) suffix (later in the paper referred to simply as “sociative”), as in the example gyerekestül. As opposed to its comitative-instrumental suffix -vAl (‘with’), the -stUl suffix cannot express instrumentality. The paper aims to demonstrate the difference in use between the comitative-instrumental -vAl and the -stUl suffix in contemporary Hungarian, and to illuminate the historical emergence of the suffix as well as its grammatical status. It is argued on the basis of Antal (1960) and Kiefer (2003) that -stUl cannot be analyzed as an inflectional case suffix (such as the -vAl suffix, or -ed, -ing, or the plural in English), but should rather be categorized as a derivational suffix (such as English dis-, re-, in-, -ance, -able, -ish, -like, etc.). The paper also tries to shed light on the hypothetical cognitive psychological distinction between the comitative and the sociative. It is suggested that the sociative is based on the amalgam image schema which is derived from the LINK schema of the comitative. The ironical reading of the sociative is an implicature in the sense of Grice (1989) and Sperber and Wilson (1987). Psycholinguistic experimentation is proposed to follow up on the mental representation of the sociative.

Recommended Citation

Fekete, István. “Hungarian gyerekestül vs. gyerekkel (‘with [the] kid’).” AHEA: E-Journal of the American Hungarian Educators Association, Volume 6 (2013): http://ahea.net/e-journal/volume-6-2013/12

Biography

István Fekete received his doctorate in cognitive psychology with a specialization in psycholinguistics from the Budapest University of Technology and Economics in 2013. He earned his M.A. degrees in English and German language and literature and English and German language education from Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest in 2006. His main research interests include psycholinguistics and cognitive linguistics. He is currently working at the Research Institute for Linguistics of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences in Budapest.