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Vollere

Vollere is a grammatical form rather than a standalone word with a fixed definition in most dictionaries. In German, vollere functions as the comparative form of the adjective voll, meaning “more full” or “more complete.” It is used to compare two or more entities in terms of fullness or completeness.

Usage and examples

In standard German, vollere can appear before feminine singular nouns or in contexts where the adjective carries

Morphology and context

German adjectives inflect according to gender, number, case, and article. The ending -ere signals the comparative

Etymology

Voll is a native Germanic adjective meaning “full.” The comparative suffix -ere developed in the history of

See also

German grammar, adjective declension, comparative forms, voll.

a
comparative
meaning
with
a
definite
article.
Examples
include
phrases
such
as
die
vollere
Torte
(the
fuller
cake)
or
eine
vollere
Version
(a
fuller
version).
The
form
may
also
appear
in
plural
contexts
where
a
comparison
involves
several
items.
In
everyday
speech,
the
more
common,
simpler
comparative
voll
is
often
chosen,
but
vollere
remains
correct
in
contexts
emphasizing
a
greater
degree
of
fullness.
degree
in
certain
feminine-singular
and
related
constructions,
especially
when
paired
with
determiners
or
in
stylistic
wording.
As
with
many
German
inflections,
exact
endings
can
vary
with
article
type
(definite,
indefinite)
and
sentence
role.
Germanic
languages
and
remains
a
productive
form
in
modern
German
for
expressive
or
emphatic
comparison.