英:[æpə'zɪʃənl]
美:[æpə'zɪʃənl]
英:[æpə'zɪʃənl]
美:[æpə'zɪʃənl]
noun
a grammatical construction in which two or more usually adjacent words, phrases, or clauses (especially nouns or noun equivalents) that have the same referent stand in the same syntactical relation to the rest of a sentence (such as the poet and Burns in "a biography of the poet Burns")
the relation between such words, phrases, or clauses
an act or instance of apposingspecifically: the deposition of successive layers upon those already present (as in cell walls)
the state of being apposed
Middle English apposicioun, apposicion "addition, application, apposition in grammar," borrowed from Medieval Latin appositiōn-, appositiō "application, addition, syntactic juxtaposition," going back to Late Latin,"application, addition," going back to Latin, "comparison," from apposi-, variant stem of appōnere "to place near, put or fit on, contribute as an additional element" + -tiōn-, -tiō, suffix of verbal action — more at apposite
The first known use of apposition was in the 15th century
appraisalnoun
an act or instance of appraising
appraisalnoun
an act or instance of appraising
appositive1 of 2adjective
of, relating to, or standing in apposition
appositive2 of 2noun
the second of a pair of nouns or noun equivalents in apposition
appositionnoun
a grammatical construction in which a noun or noun equivalent is followed by another that explains it
in "my friend the doctor," the word "doctor" is in apposition with "friend"
1 This area of cartilage within the bone grows in length by appositional growth as the individual grows to maturity.
这个区域内的软骨骨生长在同位的长度的增长随着个体的发展成熟。
2 Porous CPC exhibits more bone formation and higher mineralization appositional rate than porous titanium scaffold.
CPC材料的新生骨量、成骨速率均高于钛合金材料。
3 They also increase in width through appositional growth.
4 Composition.—It is only, however, when himself and themselves, are in the accusative case, that the construction is appositional.
5 A colon is used to introduce a series of particulars, either appositional or explanatory, which the reader has been led to expect by the first clause of the sentence.
6 Possessive, appositional, of nouns, 49. as antecedent of relative, 285. double, of nouns, 54. double, of pronouns.
7 In compound expressions, containing words in apposition, a word with a phrase, etc., the possessive sign is usually last, though instances are found with both appositional words marked.
8 In “my friend the doctor,” the word “doctor” is in apposition to “my friend.”
9 Two graphite rainbow-esque arches are at apposition with one another against a natural cream backdrop, which feels like a nod to this year’s Cracked Pepper as well as last year’s Blank Canvas.
10 The findings indicate that trilobites had apposition eyes.
11 This type is called an apposition compound eye, meaning each lens acts independently to create a mosaic image of what a creature sees.
12 But other elements were recognizable, like the flat vowels and the plaid shirts and the helpful practicality, like the lonesomeness of the undifferentiated plains, like the apposition of wilderness and chain stores.
1 同位的
2 附着的
3 同位