Appendix:Hungarian antiharmonic words

The following words, though having (unrounded) front vowels only (e, é, i, í), take back-vowel suffixes (those with a, á, o, ó, u, ú) for all their inflections and derivations, therefore they are called antiharmonic (contradicting the usual vowel harmony of Hungarian).

Nouns and adjectives
The column “Ending” contains reverse-alphabetized forms in invisible format, only to enable sorting by the ending (aside from the other headers).


 * The noun used to be inflected with back-vowel suffixes but it is now uncommon.
 * The noun was originally antiharmonic but now it is more commonly used with front-vowel suffixes.
 * The antiharmonic noun is dialectal or regional, mostly superseded by its standard, regular variant.
 * The forms and  are sometimes given as derivatives of an antiharmonic, but they actually derive from the regular, archaic noun.
 * The forms and  are rare, archaic (antiharmonic) alternatives of the regular nouns  and, respectively.

Verbs
The column “Ending” contains reverse-alphabetized forms in invisible format, only to enable sorting by the ending (aside from the other headers).