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gefrorener

Gefrorener is a German adjective form derived from the verb gefrieren, meaning to freeze. It describes something that has undergone freezing and remains in a frozen state. The common past participle gefroren is the base used in many contexts, while gefrorener appears as the attributive masculine or neuter singular form before a noun (for example, ein gefrorener Boden).

Grammatically, gefrorene is used for feminine singular and for all plural forms in attributive position (das

Gefrorener appears in everyday language primarily to describe objects or surfaces that are frozen, such as

Etymology and related terms: gefrorener is formed from gefrieren (to freeze) plus the attributive adjective ending

In summary, gefrorener denotes the masculine or neuter singular attributive form meaning “frozen,” with broader usage

gefrorene
Obst,
die
gefrorenen
Beeren).
When
used
predicatively
with
sein,
bleiben,
oder
werden,
one
typically
uses
gefroren
or
the
appropriate
inflected
form
of
the
participle
instead
of
gefrorener
(Der
Boden
ist
gefroren).
gefrorene
Lebensmittel
(frozen
foods),
gefrorener
Boden
(frozen
ground),
or
gefrorene
Obststücke.
As
a
stand-alone
noun,
the
corresponding
nominalized
form
is
Gefrorene
or
der
Gefrorene,
used
to
refer
to
a
frozen
person
or
object
in
poetic
or
specialized
contexts;
this
nominal
usage
is
relatively
rare
outside
science
fiction
or
cryonics
discussions.
-er,
reflecting
gender
and
number.
The
related
participle
gefroren
serves
as
the
base
form
for
many
adjectives
and
is
the
more
common
everyday
descriptor
in
neutral
prose.
through
its
derived
forms
for
different
genders
and
numbers,
while
nominalized
forms
exist
mainly
in
specific
or
literary
contexts.