Home

geschossene

Geschossene is a grammatical form in German rather than a standalone term with a fixed meaning. It comes from the verb schießen, which means to shoot, and specifically from the past participle geschossen. When the participle is used as an attributive adjective before a noun, it is declined to agree with the noun’s gender, number, and case. The form geschossene functions as the feminine singular attributive form, and also appears in other inflected forms such as die geschossenen Brücken (the shot bridges) in plural.

In practical use, geschossene describes objects that have been subjected to gunfire or bombardment. For example,

Because geschossene is an inflected form of geschossen, it does not constitute a separate independent word

See also: schießen, geschossen, German adjective declension, German past participles.

Eine
geschossene
Brücke
would
mean
“a
bridge
that
has
been
shot”
and
Die
geschossene
Brücke
wurde
zerstört
translates
to
“The
shot
bridge
was
destroyed.”
The
term
is
neutral
in
tone
and
is
encountered
mainly
in
descriptive,
historical,
or
military
contexts
rather
than
as
a
lexical
entry
with
its
own
meaning.
in
the
way
a
noun
might.
Its
interpretation
relies
on
the
accompanying
noun
and
the
surrounding
grammatical
context.
Other
feminine
singular
or
plural
forms
follow
standard
German
adjective
declension
rules:
das
geschossene
Fahrzeug
(neuter
singular
uses
das
geschossene)
is
avoided
here,
while
die
geschossene
Fassade
or
die
geschossenen
Brücken
are
typical
examples.