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Sinken

Sinken is a German verb meaning to move downward, to sink, or to decrease. It can describe a physical sinking, such as an object going beneath the surface, as well as a decline in values, levels, or quantities, such as temperatures, prices, or populations.

Etymology and related forms: Sinken is closely related to related Germanic languages, with cognates in English

Grammar and usage: Sinken is an intransitive verb that takes the auxiliary sein in the perfect tense.

Nuances and related terms: Distinctions exist with other verbs for downward movement. Absinken emphasizes a downward

See also: sinken, absinken, senken, untergehen.

sink
and
Dutch
zinken.
The
word
appears
in
Old
High
German
and
has
evolved
into
the
modern
forms
used
today.
It
is
typically
used
intransitively,
describing
a
subject
that
itself
moves
downward
or
loses
value,
rather
than
transferring
a
direct
object.
Present
tense
forms
are
ich
sinke,
du
sinkst,
er
sinkt,
wir
sinken,
ihr
sinkt,
sie
sinken.
The
simple
past
(Präteritum)
forms
are
ich
sank,
du
sankst,
er
sank,
wir
sanken,
ihr
sankt,
sie
sanken.
Examples:
Die
Temperatur
sinkt.
Die
Preise
sind
gesunken.
Das
Boot
ist
gesunken.
The
verb
is
commonly
used
both
literally
(a
sinking
ship,
the
ground
sinking)
and
figuratively
(numbers
or
levels
decreasing).
drift
or
subsidence,
often
of
a
body
part
or
a
level;
absenken
is
transitive
and
means
to
lower
something.
Untergehen
focuses
more
on
the
notion
of
going
down,
especially
the
sun
or
something
being
ruined.
Sinken
can
also
appear
in
noun
form
as
das
Sinken,
referring
to
the
act
or
process
of
sinking
or
decreasing,
e.g.,
das
Sinken
des
Meeresspiegels.