@article {Сонди1987, title = {Категорията обектоопределеност в унгарския език и нейните еквиваленти в българския език}, journal = {Съпоставително езикознание / Сопоставительное языкознание / Contrastive linguistics}, volume = {12}, year = {1987}, pages = {12{\textendash}22}, abstract = {In Hungarian, there is a specific verbal category, known as object-definiteness, which is characterized by {\quotedblbase}the presence (or absence) of a definite 3rd person grammatical object{\textquotedblleft}. The article discusses this category and the so-called definite conjugation of verbs. In search of equivalents for this grammatical category in Bulgarian, a list of the uses with verbs of the clytics го {\textquoteleft}him, it{\textquoteright}, я {\textquoteleft}her{\textquoteright} and ги {\textquoteleft}them{\textquoteright} is compiled. After analysing 13 sentence functions of these movable form-formatives, the author shows how go {\textquoteleft}him, it{\textquoteright} evolved from a morpheme with the function of a doubled object (identifying reference) to an independent anaphorizer (or cataphorizer) of a distant familiar (definite) object. Summarizing the results of the contrastive analysis, the author draws the following conclusions: (1) the real function of the definite conjugation is to signal the object (definite direct object) if it is not expressed in the sentence; (2) the category of definiteness could also be applied to the Bulgarian verb; (3) in Bulgarian, there are affix-like particles for optional indication of the object, the recipient and even the beneficiary, and not only when it is a 3rd person object (or indirect object) at that.}, author = {Сонди, Дьорд} }