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wörtliche

Wörtliche is the attributive form of the German adjective wörtlich, meaning literal or verbatim. It is not typically used as a stand‑alone noun; instead it appears before a noun to specify that content is taken exactly as stated. The most common usage is in phrases such as die wörtliche Rede (direct speech) or das wörtliche Zitat (verbatim quotation).

In grammar and style, wörtliche takes the inflected endings of the definite article system. Examples include

In use, wörtliche Rede designates the exact wording spoken, written, or quoted, as opposed to indirect or

Etymology traces wörtlich to the German word Wort (word), with the suffix -lich forming an adjective meaning

die
wörtliche
Rede
(feminine
singular),
das
wörtliche
Zitat
(neuter
singular),
die
wörtlichen
Reden
(plural),
and
die
wörtlichen
Zitate
(plural).
The
word
can
modify
other
feminine,
masculine,
or
neuter
nouns
in
singular
when
the
article
is
definite,
always
carrying
the
-e
ending
in
singular
forms.
reported
speech,
which
paraphrases
meaning.
For
instance,
a
quotation
marks
example
might
be
presented
in
wörtlicher
Form:
Sie
sagte:
"Ich
komme
morgen."
The
paraphrase
would
be:
Sie
sagte,
sie
komme
morgen
(indirekte
Rede).
In
scholarly
writing,
wörtliche
Wiedergabe
or
wörtliches
Zitat
are
common
terms
to
indicate
verbatim
reproduction
of
source
text.
related
to
words
or
wording.
Wörtliche
is
therefore
tied
closely
to
concepts
of
direct
quotation,
literal
meaning,
and
verbatim
reproduction
in
linguistics
and
literature.
See
also
direct
speech,
indirect
speech,
and
quotation
practices.