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wörtlicher

Wörtlicher is the inflected form of the German adjective wörtlich, meaning literal or word-for-word. The term is used to describe wording that follows the exact words spoken or written, as opposed to figurative or paraphrased language. In practice, wörtlich functions as an ordinary adjective and appears in various declined forms depending on case, gender, and determiner.

Grammatical use and forms. As the comparative form, wörtlicher means “more literal” and can modify a masculine

Usage and nuance. Wörtlich is common in linguistics, translation studies, journalism, and literary analysis to distinguish

Related terms. Wörtlich is the base form; wörtliche Rede refers to direct quotation; Wortlaut denotes the exact

singular
noun,
often
in
a
sentence
like
Der
Satz
ist
wörtlicher
als
jener.
In
attributive
position
with
determiners,
the
form
changes
to
wörtliche
(e.g.,
der
wörtliche
Sinn,
die
wörtliche
Rede).
With
indefinites
or
possessives,
forms
such
as
ein
wörtlicher
Sinn
or
mein
wörtlicher
Sinn
occur.
In
the
phrase
im
wörtlichen
Sinn,
the
adjective
takes
the
appropriate
declension
for
a
masculine
noun
in
the
dative
position.
The
singular
genitive
usually
yields
des
wörtlichen
Sinns.
exact
wording
from
paraphrase
or
figurative
meaning.
Phrases
like
wörtlich
genommen
and
im
wörtlichen
Sinn
emphasize
direct,
unaltered
wording.
The
term
is
often
contrasted
with
wortgetreu
or
im
Wortlaut,
which
highlight
fidelity
to
the
original
wording
in
slightly
different
shades.
wording;
wortgetreu
means
true
to
the
original
sense.
Together,
these
terms
help
describe
how
language
aligns
with
or
departs
from
original
wording.