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Klaffen

Klaffen is a German verb meaning to gape, to yawn, or to be open, typically used to describe a wide opening or space. It can refer to physical openings such as a gap in a wall or seam, or to figurative gaps such as differences in opinion or data. In everyday usage, the verb is more common in literary or descriptive prose.

Conjugation and usage: Klaffen is a regular weak verb. In the present tense, forms include ich klaffe,

Etymology and language notes: The exact origin of klaffen is not documented in detail here, but the

See also: In German-language usage, klaffen is often contrasted with verbs that describe openings more precisely,

du
klaffst,
er/sie/es
klafft,
wir
klaffen,
ihr
klafft,
sie/Sie
klaffen.
The
simple
past
is
klaffte
for
all
but
the
second
and
plural
forms,
and
the
past
participle
is
geklafft.
Example
sentences
illustrate
both
literal
and
figurative
uses:
Die
Kluft
klafft
zwischen
Arm
und
Reich.
Eine
Lücke
klafft
in
der
Wand.
Die
Debatte
klafft
weiter.
verb
is
of
Germanic
origin
and
has
cognates
in
other
West
Germanic
languages.
It
is
described
as
a
somewhat
formal
or
literary
term
in
modern
German,
more
common
in
descriptive
writing
than
in
casual
speech.
such
as
öffnen
(to
open)
or
entstehen
(to
arise),
when
referring
to
openings
or
gaps.
The
term
may
appear
in
discussions
of
seams,
gaps
in
data,
or
metaphorical
divides.