Apposition: Difference between revisions
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Appositions {{comment|(not to be confused with [[adpositions]])}} are used to help clarify and/or disambiguate, often adding context/explanation/definition/description/name. | |||
In English (and presumably in | |||
appositional modifiers are typically placed directly next to the things they augment | In English (and presumably in many other languages), | ||
appositional modifiers are typically placed directly next to the things they augment. | |||
Typically both parts of the relation are [[nominals]], and often [[full nominals]], {{comment|(which also implies that often, you could create a correct sentence with either(/any) of the parts, though this can be strained, and don't count on it having/attaching the same semantic meaning; it's more about whether the reference is fairly independent)}} | |||
For example: | For example: | ||
* the parenthetical in "{{example|John, a mathematician, has a habit of mumbling}}" adds contextual information to ''John'' | * the parenthetical in "{{example|John, a mathematician, has a habit of mumbling}}" | ||
: adds contextual information to ''John'' | |||
* abbreviations next to their expansion | * abbreviations next to their expansion | ||
* in {{example|men and women}}, both are put it a more limited and specific context | * in {{example|men and women}}, both are put it a more limited and specific context | ||
:: which in this particular case suggests that this context we are grouping or distinguishing gender. | |||
* In {{example|The name John stands for ...}}, name is an appositional modifier for John | * In {{example|The name John stands for ...}}, name is an appositional modifier for John | ||
* You can have multiple | |||
** Bob, your sister, my lover, ... | |||
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* Arguably, things like | * Arguably, things like | ||
** putting an abbreviation next to the long form () | ** putting an abbreviation next to the long form () | ||
** putting titles next to names, e.g. "Senator Alice Bob" | ** putting titles next to names, e.g. "Senator Alice Bob" | ||
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Note that | Note that | ||
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* the previous example is also an example that, while a lot of apposition is fairly parenthentical and punctuation is a good indication, there are variants that do not look like that | * the previous example is also an example that, while a lot of apposition is fairly parenthentical and punctuation is a good indication, there are variants that do not look like that | ||
* when in doubt whether something is an appositional relation | <!-- | ||
* when in doubt whether something is an appositional relation, you can e.g. ask whether you could swap the two things. | |||
* sometimes titles can seem like part of a name and not e.g. be interchangeable for that reason - and a longer form of writing the same ''would'' be interchangeable and probably apposition. | |||
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https://universaldependencies.org/u/dep/appos.html | |||
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[[Category:Linguistics]] | [[Category:Linguistics]] |
Latest revision as of 00:26, 21 April 2024
✎ This article/section is a stub — some half-sorted notes, not necessarily checked, not necessarily correct. Feel free to ignore, or tell me about it.
Appositions (not to be confused with adpositions) are used to help clarify and/or disambiguate, often adding context/explanation/definition/description/name.
In English (and presumably in many other languages),
appositional modifiers are typically placed directly next to the things they augment.
Typically both parts of the relation are nominals, and often full nominals, (which also implies that often, you could create a correct sentence with either(/any) of the parts, though this can be strained, and don't count on it having/attaching the same semantic meaning; it's more about whether the reference is fairly independent)
For example:
- the parenthetical in "John, a mathematician, has a habit of mumbling"
- adds contextual information to John
- abbreviations next to their expansion
- in men and women, both are put it a more limited and specific context
- which in this particular case suggests that this context we are grouping or distinguishing gender.
- In The name John stands for ..., name is an appositional modifier for John
- You can have multiple
- Bob, your sister, my lover, ...
Note that
- since the explanation can be long, the appositional relation between a phrase's head can be some words away
- In "The leader of the national opposition, Bob, ...", leader has an appositional relation to bob,
- the previous example is also an example that, while a lot of apposition is fairly parenthentical and punctuation is a good indication, there are variants that do not look like that