Home

gereifter

Gereifter is a German adjective—the comparative form of gereift—meaning matured or ripened. It is used to describe items that have reached a higher degree of maturation or development, such as wine, cheese, fruit, or bread, and can also be used metaphorically for people or ideas.

Grammatically, it appears in attributive position with endings that reflect gender, number, and case: masculine singular

Usage tends to be common in culinary and sensory contexts, where gereifter wine or gereifter Käse signals

Etymology and related forms: the word derives from reifen (to ripen) with the prefix ge- forming the

nominative
gereifter;
feminine
singular
gereifte;
neuter
singular
gereifes;
plural
gereifte.
Examples:
ein
gereifter
Käse,
eine
gereifte
Frucht,
ein
gereiftes
Brot,
gereifte
Früchte.
The
endings
follow
standard
German
adjective
declension
after
determiners
or
in
strong
form.
longer
aging
and
a
more
pronounced
character.
It
also
occurs
in
figurative
language,
such
as
eine
gereifte
Persönlichkeit
or
gereifter
Humor,
to
describe
increased
maturity
or
refinement
in
a
person
or
concept.
past
participle
gereift,
of
which
gereifter
is
the
comparative.
It
is
distinct
from
the
base
adjective
reif
and
from
the
verb
form
to
ripen;
its
primary
function
is
to
compare
degrees
of
maturity.
See
also
Reife,
Reifung,
and
Gereift
as
related
terms.