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vollem

Vollem is not a separate lexical item in German; it is the dative singular inflected form of the adjective voll, meaning “full.” German adjectives inflect for case, gender, and number, and vollem appears in the dative singular in contexts without a determiner or with strong inflection.

In practice, vollem is commonly seen in phrases that describe fullness in the dative case, such as

Usage notes:

- Vollem occurs with the dative singular of the noun it modifies and typically corresponds to a

- It signals fullness or abundance in a context where the noun is in the dative case and

- It is not used as an independent word outside of its role as a grammatical form.

Etymology:

Vollem derives from voll, meaning full, with the dative singular ending -em.

Overall, vollem is a common grammatical form in German, illustrating how adjectives inflect to convey case

mit
vollem
Mund
(with
a
full
mouth)
or
mit
vollem
Glas
(with
a
full
glass).
When
a
determiner
is
present
and
the
adjective
takes
a
different
inflection
pattern,
the
ending
changes
to
forms
like
dem
vollen
Mund
or
der
vollen
Stunde,
depending
on
gender
and
number.
strong
inflection
pattern
for
the
adjective.
is
often
preceded
by
a
preposition
like
mit.
and
relationship
to
the
noun
within
a
sentence.