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teuren

Teuren is the inflected form of the German adjective teuer, meaning expensive or costly. In German, adjectives change endings to agree with the gender, number and case of the noun they modify. The form teuren appears in several combinations, most commonly after the definite article in plural or in certain singular cases.

Usage and forms

- Plural nominative/accusative after a definite article: die teuren Autos (the expensive cars)

- Singular masculine accusative after a definite article: den teuren Preis (the expensive price)

- Plural dative: den teuren Preisen (to/for the expensive prices)

- Singular feminine dative after a definite article: der teuren Blume (to the expensive flower)

These examples illustrate how teuren signals a specific inflection pattern: the ending -en is used in many

Etymology and related terms

Teuer comes from the Germanic family of languages and is cognate with Dutch duur and English dear

See also

teuer, Preis, Kosten, Kostenpflicht, Preisbildung.

common
cases
when
the
noun
is
definite
or
marked
for
case
and
number.
in
its
sense
of
costliness.
The
word
has
long
been
part
of
everyday
commerce
and
description,
ranging
from
price
labels
to
evaluative
statements
about
goods
and
services.
In
contemporary
usage,
teuer
and
its
inflected
forms,
including
teuren,
are
standard
in
formal
writing
and
in
advertisements,
though
in
casual
speech
speakers
often
prefer
synonyms
such
as
kostspielig
or
hochpreisig.