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reizendes

Reizendes is the attributive form of the German adjective reizend, meaning charming, attractive, or alluring. It is used to describe something that arouses interest or pleasure and appears directly before a neuter noun in singular, most commonly with no article or with an indefinite article.

Etymology and nuance: reizend derives from Reiz, meaning stimulus or appeal, with the suffix -end forming a

Usage and examples: When used before a neuter noun, reizendes appears in the neuter singular nominative or

Grammar note: The form reizendes is specific to neuter singular. Other genders require different endings: masculine

See also: reizend, Reiz, adjective declension in German.

present-participle
style
adjective.
The
sense
conveyed
by
reizend
and
its
inflected
forms
is
that
something
has
a
pleasing,
enticing
quality
that
invites
admiration
or
desire.
accusative
without
a
definite
article
or
with
the
indefinite
article
ein.
Examples:
ein
reizendes
Lächeln
(an
attractive
smile),
ein
reizendes
Parfüm
(an
alluring
perfume).
With
a
definite
article,
the
ending
changes
to
reizende:
das
reizende
Lächeln,
die
reizende
Stimme.
The
term
carries
a
positive,
aesthetically
flattering
nuance
and
is
common
in
descriptive
prose,
aesthetics,
and
marketing
language.
It
can
describe
people,
objects,
or
sensory
impressions.
singular
(ein
reizender
Mann),
feminine
singular
(eine
reizende
Stimme).
The
endings
adapt
according
to
article
type
(definite,
indefinite)
and
grammatical
case.