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Materieller

Materieller is a German adjective meaning material, physical, or pertaining to matter. It is derived from the noun Materie (matter) and the noun Material, and is used to distinguish tangible, physical aspects from immaterial or conceptual ones. In everyday and technical language, materiell describes properties, conditions, or items that are concrete and observable.

Grammatical note: materiell forms are inflected to agree with gender, number, and case. The base form is

- Masculine singular with an indefinite article: ein materieller Prozess

- Feminine singular: eine materielle Entscheidung

- Neuter singular: ein materielles Objekt

- Plural with a definite article: die materiellen Bedingungen

The exact endings vary with the article and case, as with most German adjectives.

Usage and scope: In science, engineering, law, and philosophy, materiell often refers to tangible aspects as

Related terms: materiell is connected to Material, Materie, and the concept of Materialismus (materialism). It contrasts

See also: Material, Materie, Materialismus, immateriell, substanz.

materiell.
For
example:
opposed
to
immaterial
or
abstract
ones.
In
philosophy,
it
relates
to
materialism
and
discussions
about
whether
matter
or
consciousness
is
fundamental.
In
law
and
administration,
terms
like
materielles
Recht
(substantive
law)
or
Beweismaterial
(evidence
material)
illustrate
the
broad
sense
of
the
word
as
describing
physical
or
substantial
matters
rather
than
procedural
or
formal
ones.
with
immateriell
(immaterial)
and
with
concepts
that
emphasize
abstract,
conceptual,
or
spiritual
aspects.