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rät

Rät is the third-person singular present tense form of the German verb raten. The verb has two main senses in modern German: to advise someone to do something, and to guess or infer something based on information. The exact meaning is determined by context.

In the sense of giving advice, raten means to recommend or urge someone to take a course

In the sense of guessing or predicting, raten can express an attempt to infer something that is

Conjugation in the present tense is: ich rate, du rätst, er rät, wir raten, ihr ratet, sie

of
action.
It
is
commonly
used
with
a
dative
object
and
an
infinitive
clause:
Er
rät
mir,
früh
aufzustehen.
Das
Unternehmen
rät
den
Mitarbeitern,
das
Angebot
zu
prüfen.
The
form
rät
is
used
with
"er"
(he)
or
with
other
subjects
in
present
tense
as
appropriate.
not
certain.
This
use
often
appears
with
a
clause
introduced
by
dass
or
with
a
direct
assertion
about
a
future
outcome:
Der
Experte
rät,
dass
der
Kurs
steigen
wird.
It
can
also
appear
in
questions
like
Was
rät
er
dir?
to
ask
what
someone
thinks
will
happen.
raten.
The
pronunciation
of
rät
features
a
long
a
sound,
and
the
form
changes
reflect
the
German
umlaut
pattern
in
the
du
and
er
forms.
Etymologically,
raten
derives
from
the
German
verb
raten,
related
to
advice
and
estimation,
and
shares
roots
with
related
Germanic
verbs
for
counsel
and
inference.