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getrouwere

Getrouwere is a historical Dutch linguistic term that denotes the comparative degree of the adjective getrouw, meaning more faithful or more loyal. It is chiefly attested in Middle Dutch and Early Modern Dutch, and persists in some regional dialects or in stylized literary contexts. In contemporary standard Dutch, the ordinary comparative form is getrouwer, while getrouwere appears mainly in older texts or in poetry that aims to imitate archaic speech.

Etymology and form: The construction reflects the typical Dutch prefix ge- forming participial or adjectival forms,

Usage and context: Getrouwere was used to express a higher degree of fidelity in persons, pledges, or

See also: getrouw, getrouwer, getrouwe.

attached
to
the
root
trouw
(faithful,
loyal).
The
comparative
suffix
-ere
appears
in
certain
historical
grammars
or
dialectal
spellings,
producing
getrouwere
as
an
older
variant
of
the
modern
getrouwer.
The
development
aligns
with
parallel
Germanic
patterns,
where
related
words
for
fidelity
survive
across
languages
(for
example,
German
treu).
alliances,
often
within
narrative,
legal
documents,
or
ceremonial
prose.
Today,
the
term
is
considered
archaic
or
regional;
most
Dutch
speakers
would
use
getrouwer
to
convey
the
same
meaning.
In
scholarly
editions
of
historical
texts,
getrouwere
may
be
encountered
as
part
of
a
faithful
reproduction
of
older
orthography
and
grammar.