This is a partial list of known or supposed Hungarian loanwords in English:
biro
From
László Bíró, the Hungarian inventor of the ballpoint pen. Bíró originally means judge.
coach
From
kocsi, a horse‐drawn wagon with springs above the axles. Named after the village of Kocs in which this type of vehicle was invented. The verb 'to coach' is also derived from this root.
czardas
From
csárdás, a Hungarian folk dance.
Csárda also means 'tavern'.
Dobos torte or Dobosh
From
Dobos torta, "Dobos cake". After confectioner József C. Dobos.
friska
From
friss, a fast section of music, often associated with
czardas dances (
cf. lassan).
goulash
From
gulyás, a type of stew known in Hungarian as
gulyás in Hungary, 'gulyás
leves' is a soup dish; leves meaning soup.
Gulyás also means 'herdsman' dealing with cattle, as the noun
gulya is the Hungarian word for cattle herd. (This can cause confusion with native Hungarian speakers, as Hungarians generally understand unqualified "gulyás" to mean "gulyásleves", the soup, instead referring to the international
goulash as "pörkölt".)
hajduk
From
hajdúk, "bandits". Outlaw, guerilla fighter. The original Hungarian meaning was "cattle drover".
halászlé
, or Fisherman's Soup, a very hot and spicy river fish soup with a lot of paprika. (The actual Hungarian
halászlé is not always made with hot paprika, unlike the internationally-known soup.)
hussar
From Hungarian
huszár, a light cavalry soldier. The Hungarian word originally meant "freebooter" and was further derived via Old Serbian
husar, gusar, gursar ("pirate") from Italian
corsaro ("pirate"), i.e. the same root as that of English
corsair.
Itsy-bitsy
is sometimes linked to Hungarian
ici-pici ("tiny") by popular sources, but is regarded as an unrelated English formation by English dictionaries.
komondor
A big Hungarian breed of livestock guardian and dog, looking like big mop, always white.
kuvasz
A big Hungarian breed of shepherd dog, always white.
lassan
From
lassú, "slowly". a slow section of music, often associated with
czardas dances (
cf. friska).
palacsinta
a form of pancake popular throughout central Europe
paprika
a spice produced from the ground, dried fruits of
Capsicum annuum, a red pepper
puli
A small Hungarian breed of shepherd dog, also looking like a mop, usually black or white.
pusta
From
puszta, a kind of Hungarian steppe.
sabre (UK) or saber (US)
From French (
sabre,
sable), ultimately from an unknown source in a language of Eastern origin, possibly through Hungarian
szablya.
shako or tsako
From
csákó süveg, 'peaked cap', a stiff military hat with a high crown and plume.
tokaji or tokay
From
tokaji aszú, the name of the wine from Tokaj, the centre of the local wine-growing district Tokaj-Hegyalja.
verbunkos
a Hungarian men's folk dance and musical style (itself coming from German Werbung - meaning "military recruitment" here).
vizsla or vizla
From
vizsla, a Hungarian breed of hunting dog.