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kurze

Kurze is the inflected form of the German adjective kurz, meaning "short." In German, adjectives are declined to reflect gender, case, and number, so kurze appears in several common forms. It is used before nouns to describe length or duration, and its ending changes with the surrounding article and noun.

With a definite article, the adjective takes the ending -e in all singular genders: der kurze Mann,

With an indefinite article, endings vary by gender: ein kurzer Mann (masculine singular), eine kurze Strecke

Kurze is primarily a descriptive adjective and not a noun. It can occur in compound phrases and

Etymology and cognates: kurz derives from the Germanic root for “short,” with cognates in related languages

In summary, kurze is a versatile, grammatically inflected form of kurz used across masculine, feminine, neuter,

die
kurze
Frau,
das
kurze
Auto.
In
the
plural
with
a
definite
article,
the
ending
is
-en:
die
kurzen
Strecken.
When
there
is
no
definite
article,
the
strong
ending
for
the
plural
is
-e:
kurze
Strecken.
(feminine
singular),
ein
kurzes
Auto
(neuter
singular).
In
each
case,
kurze
is
the
base
form
used
for
feminine
singular
in
the
definite
article
and
for
masculine
and
neuter
singular
forms
under
other
article
patterns.
is
common
in
everyday
usage,
for
example
to
describe
a
short
distance
(eine
kurze
Strecke)
or
a
brief
explanation
(eine
kurze
Erklärung).
such
as
Dutch
kort,
Danish
kort,
and
Swedish
kort.
The
form
kurze
represents
the
modern
German
inflection
used
in
various
grammatical
contexts.
and
plural
contexts
to
denote
brevity
or
limited
duration
in
German.