Home

tägliche

Tägliche is the attributive form of the German adjective täglich, meaning daily or everyday. It is used before a noun and agrees with the noun’s gender, number, and case. In practice, tageliche appears most commonly before feminine singular nouns (for example, die tägliche Routine, meine tägliche Aufgabe). It also appears in other determiner contexts that trigger the same ending, such as after possessive determiners (meine tägliche Routine) or after the definite article.

Etymology and grammar: törig from Middle High German taglîch, itself derived from Tag “day” plus a suffix

Usage notes: tägliche is primarily used as an attributive adjective directly before a noun. It contrasts with

See also: täglicher Gebrauch (frequent use of daily), täglich (adverb meaning every day), täglichkeit (the quality

meaning
“like,
pertaining
to.”
The
modern
form
täg-
with
the
ending
-lich
developed
over
centuries
into
täglich.
The
attributive
ending
changes
with
the
noun:
feminine
singular
often
takes
-e
(tägliche),
masculine
singular
commonly
takes
-er
(täglicher),
neuter
singular
-es
(tägliches),
and
plural
forms
add
-en
in
most
definite
contexts
(die
täglichen
Nachrichten).
täglich,
which
functions
as
an
adverb
meaning
“every
day”
or
“daily”
(Ich
lese
täglich
die
Zeitung).
Common
collocations
include
tägliche
Routine,
tägliche
Aufgaben,
tägliche
Berichte,
tägliche
Nachrichten,
and
das
tägliche
Brot.
The
noun
phrase
typically
conveys
a
sense
of
regular,
day-to-day
recurrence
or
routine.
of
being
daily).
Note
that
while
tägliche
conveys
the
idea
of
daily
repetition
when
used
before
a
noun,
the
frequency
nuance
is
often
clearer
through
context
or
the
adverb
täglich.