apposition
nounEtymology
From Middle English apposicioun, from Middle French apposition, from Latin appositiō, past participle of appōnere (“to put near”).
- derived from appositiō
- derived from apposition
- inherited from apposicioun
Definitions
A construction in which one noun or noun phrase is placed with another as an explanatory…
A construction in which one noun or noun phrase is placed with another as an explanatory equivalent, both of them having the same syntactic function in the sentence.
- The apposition in the title has been read as indicating that ‘Hobson-Jobson’ is equivalent to ‘colloquial Anglo-Indian words and phrases’.
The relationship between such nouns or noun phrases.
The quality of being side by side, apposed instead of opposed, next to each other.
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A placing of two things side by side, or the fitting together of two things.
The growth of successive layers of a cell wall.
Appositio, the addition of an element not syntactically required.
A public disputation by scholars.
A (now purely ceremonial) speech day at St Paul's School, London.
The neighborhood
Derived
Vish — recursive loop
No curated loop yet for apposition. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.
sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA