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gewordenen

Gewordenen is a German grammatical form rather than a standalone lexical item. It is the declined form of the past participle geworden, which comes from the verb werden (to become). In ordinary usage geworden is the participle used to form perfect tenses and passive constructions, as in ich bin geworden (I have become) or es ist geworden (it has become).

Gewordenen appears when the participle is inflected to agree with a noun in case, gender and number,

Examples of use, conceptually:

- As a noun phrase: Die Gewordenen standen am Rand des Feldes. (The ones who have become stood

- As a plural form in citations or headings: Die Gewordenen des Zeitgeists.

In philosophy and literature, das Gewordene or die Gewordenen can denote states of having been formed or

or
when
it
is
used
in
a
nominal
(noun-like)
function.
In
practice,
German
writers
typically
prefer
the
related
nominal
forms
for
a
substantive
sense:
Gewordene
(singular)
and
Gewordenen
(plural).
These
forms
function
as
nouns
meaning
“the
ones
who
have
become”
or
more
generally
“the
becoming
ones.”
The
use
is
more
common
in
literary,
philosophical,
or
rhetorical
contexts
than
in
everyday
speech.
at
the
edge
of
the
field.)
realized,
emphasizing
completion
or
transformation
rather
than
the
ongoing
process
of
becoming.
Because
gewordenen
is
primarily
a
grammatical
inflection
of
geworden,
most
references
treat
it
as
a
functional
form
rather
than
a
separate
semantic
item;
the
substantive
sense
arises
through
Gewordene/Gewordenen.