Home

überbrückt

Überbrückt is the morphology of the German verb überbrücken and functions as both the third-person singular present tense form (er/sie/es überbrückt) and the past participle (die Brücke hat den Fluss überbrückt/ die Lücke ist überbrückt worden). The base verb means to bridge over, to span a gap, or to make a connection where none existed, whether physically, temporally, or metaphorically.

Etymology and formation: überbrücken is a compound of prefix über- (“over, across”) and brücken (“to bridge”). The

Usage and contexts: In a physical sense, überbrücken describes structures or actions that span a gap, such

Grammatical notes: überbrücken is a transitive verb and typically takes a direct object in the accusative case

See also: Überbrückung, the noun denoting the act of bridging, and related phrases describing analogous bridging

prefix
signals
crossing
a
space
or
gap,
and
the
verb
can
be
used
in
concrete,
spatial
senses
as
well
as
in
abstract
contexts.
as
a
bridge
over
a
river
or
a
walkway
that
überbrückt
a
gorge.
In
temporal
or
abstract
terms,
it
can
denote
covering
a
period
of
time
or
resolving
a
gap
in
knowledge,
communication,
or
negotiation,
for
example,
“eine
Lücke
in
der
Argumentation
überbrücken”
or
“eine
Zeitspanne
überbrücken.”
The
term
is
common
in
technical,
architectural,
and
organizational
language
as
well
as
in
everyday
speech.
(die
Lücke,
den
Fluss,
etc.).
In
the
perfect
tense,
the
auxiliary
is
haben:
„Ich
habe
die
Lücke
überbrückt.“
The
participle
form
is
identically
spelled
as
“überbrückt”
in
both
the
past
participle
and
the
third-person
singular
present
tense.
actions
in
time
or
discourse.