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prekären

Prekären is the plural, inflected form of the German adjective prekär, used to describe conditions, situations, or social arrangements that are insecure, unstable, or lacking sufficient protection. In contemporary usage, the term commonly refers to precarious work (such as temporary contracts, part-time or gig economy arrangements), irregular income, and precarious living conditions, but it can also describe unstable housing, uncertain social status, or fragile political circumstances. The concept is often discussed in sociology, labor market policy, and political discourse to highlight vulnerability and the lack of long-term security.

Grammatically, prekären appears before plural nouns and after definite articles or other determiners in the appropriate

Etymology and related terms: prekär comes from French précaire, which in turn derives from Latin precarius,

See also: precarious work, precarious employment, precarious living conditions, Prekariat.

case.
For
example:
die
prekären
Verhältnisse
(nominative
or
accusative
plural)
and
den
prekären
Verhältnissen
(dative
plural).
In
other
plural
forms
with
indefinite
determiners
or
without
a
determiner,
the
ending
differs
(prekäre
Verhältnisse,
etc.).
This
pattern
reflects
standard
German
adjective
declension.
meaning
dependent
on
the
will
or
favor
of
another.
In
German,
the
adjective
has
become
a
common
label
for
insecure
social
and
economic
conditions.
A
related
noun
is
das
Prekariat,
used
in
sociology
and
political
theory
to
refer
to
a
social
class
characterized
by
persistent
insecurity
and
instability.