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Praktische

Praktische is the feminine singular inflected form of the German adjective praktisch. It is used attributively before a feminine noun to indicate that the noun is related to practice, usefulness, or real-world applicability. In English, the sense corresponds to “practical.” The base adjective derives from Praxis, the concept of practice, and has cognates in other Germanic languages (for example Dutch praktisch) as well as a long-standing connection to the Latin-root idea of usefulness and implementation.

Usage in German spans education, work, and daily life. Common phrases include praktische Fähigkeiten (practical skills),

Grammatical note: as an attributive adjective, praktisch is declined for gender, number, and case. For feminine

See also: Praktisch, Praxis, practical (translation), and related German terms such as das Praktische.

praktische
Übungen
(practical
exercises),
praktische
Anwendung
(practical
application),
and
praktische
Lösung
(practical
solution).
It
also
appears
in
compound
nouns
such
as
praktische
Erfahrung
(practical
experience).
When
used
with
different
articles
or
without
an
article,
the
ending
changes
according
to
standard
German
adjective
inflection
rules.
singular
nouns,
the
nominative
and
accusative
forms
are
accompanied
by
-e:
die
praktische
Lösung,
eine
praktische
Lösung.
In
the
dative
feminine,
the
form
is
der
praktischen
Lösung.
In
the
plural,
Sie
würden
sagen:
die
praktischen
Lösungen.
The
adjective
can
also
be
nominalized
to
Das
Praktische,
referring
to
practical
matters
or
the
practical
side
of
something.