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sporadische

Sporadische is the inflected form of the German adjective sporadisch and is used to describe events, findings, or occurrences that are irregular, scattered, or isolated. In everyday and technical writing it appears in phrases such as sporadische Vorkommnisse (sporadic occurrences), sporadische Fälle (sporadic cases), or sporadische Ausfälle (sporadic outages). The term signals that the phenomenon does not follow a regular pattern or predictable rhythm.

Etymology and meaning: The word derives from Latin sporadicus, itself from Greek sporadikos, meaning scattered or

Applications in science and elsewhere: In medicine and epidemiology, sporadische Fälle refer to individual cases that

Usage notes: Sporadische is not a fixed noun; it functions as an adjective and typically accompanies a

scattered
about.
In
German,
the
form
sporadische
adapts
to
the
gender
and
case
of
the
noun
it
modifies,
much
as
other
adjectives
do.
The
base
meaning
remains
tied
to
irregularity
and
lack
of
a
consistent
sequence.
arise
without
a
clear
link
to
an
outbreak
or
hereditary
pattern,
contrasting
with
familial
or
clustered
occurrences.
In
archaeology,
linguistics,
or
ecology,
sporadische
Funde
or
Beobachtungen
describe
evidence
that
is
irregular
or
infrequent
rather
than
continuous
or
systematic.
The
term
helps
distinguish
isolated
observations
from
those
that
form
part
of
a
known,
regular
pattern.
feminine
noun
in
its
given
form.
The
English
equivalent
is
sporadic,
while
in
German
the
base
adjective
is
sporadisch,
with
sporadische
as
one
of
its
inflected
forms.
See
also
sporadisch
and
sporadic
for
cross-language
usage.