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quäkenden

Quäkenden is a term whose precise meaning is not established in major dictionaries. It appears mainly as a form that resembles the present participle or gerund of a Germanic-style verb, with the -enden ending and an umlauted stem, but no standard verb quäken/quaken is widely attested in contemporary usage. As a result, quäkenden is typically encountered as a coined or dialectal form rather than a fixed lexical item.

In practice, the term often appears in one of two ways. In fictional, poetic, or experimental texts,

Because there is no consensus definition, any use of quäkenden should include a clear definition at first

See also: quack, quaking, neologism, participle.

quäkenden
may
be
introduced
as
a
proper
noun
or
self-contained
concept
referring
to
a
group,
practice,
or
phenomenon
related
to
sound,
breath,
or
tremor,
depending
on
the
author's
invention.
In
linguistic
discussions,
it
might
be
cited
as
an
illustrative
example
of
how
Germanic-derived
participles
can
form
nominals
or
as
a
case
study
for
neologisms,
where
its
definition
is
supplied
by
the
author
or
editor.
occurrence
and,
ideally,
a
citation
to
a
source.
The
term
thus
functions
more
as
a
placeholder
or
coinage
within
a
text
than
as
an
established
lexical
item.