Citations:Magyarism

Hungarianism (borrowed Hungarian word)
Magyarisms and so on. The Slavonic language shall enrich itself from truly Slavonic sources alone."
 * 1921, The Hungarian Peace Negotiations: An Account of the Work of the Hungarian Peace Delegation at Neuilly S/S, from January to March, 1920:
 * Since the Russi[a]ns of Galicia have been subjected to the Polish cultural influence ever since 1340, a considerable number of Polonisms have slipped in to the language of the people, just as Magyarisms did in Hungary. These impurities ...
 * 2008, Studia Slavica:
 * He also abundantly introduces Magyarisms with an eye of explicating meanings of some obsolete or loan (Polish) forms. Some of these Magyarisms were Andrella&#39;s individual borrowings, not found in the local vernacular, ...
 * 2008, Ján Kollár, Reciprocity between the various tribes and dialects of the Slavic nation, Slavica Pub:
 * "Each will defend itself more industriously against all barbarisms, stamp out foreign words and expressions, reject Latinisms, Germanisms, Tatarisms, Magyarisms, and so on, and be able to enrich itself from true Slavic sources."
 * 2012, Josette Baer, Preparing Liberty in Central Europe (ISBN 9783838255460), page 54:
 * "Linguistic purity will extinguish foreign terms and concepts forfeiting Latinisms, Germanisms, Tartarisms and

Hungarianism (musical sense? or loanword sense?)

 * 1982, Stephen Walsh, Bartók chamber music, British Broadcasting Corporation:
 * ... interval also pervades the Sonata for two pianos, to say nothing of the string quartets, in none of which works is there any exotic easternness (though no doubt many of the Magyarisms in Bartok&#39;s folk-song derivations are eastern in origin).