apposition

noun
/ˌæpəˈzɪʃn̩/

Etymology

From Middle English apposicioun, from Middle French apposition, from Latin appositiō, past participle of appōnere (“to put near”).

  1. derived from appositiō
  2. derived from apposition
  3. inherited from apposicioun

Definitions

  1. 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’.
  2. The relationship between such nouns or noun phrases.

  3. The quality of being side by side, apposed instead of opposed, next to each other.

  4. + 5 more definitions
    1. A placing of two things side by side, or the fitting together of two things.

    2. The growth of successive layers of a cell wall.

    3. Appositio, the addition of an element not syntactically required.

    4. A public disputation by scholars.

    5. A (now purely ceremonial) speech day at St Paul's School, London.

The neighborhood

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