Apposition: Difference between revisions

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Things that add context/explanation/definition/description/name.
Things that add context/explanation/definition/description/name.


In English (and presumably in general), appositional modifiers are typically placed directly next to the thing (noun/nominal?) they augment.
In English (and presumably in general),  
appositional modifiers are typically placed directly next to the things they augment,
and typically both parts of the relation are [[nominals]].




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* 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
* Arguably, things like
** putting an abbreviation next to the long form ()
** putting titles next to names, e.g. "Senator Alice Bob"
* 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
* when in doubt whether something is an appositional relation
** ask whether you could swap the two things


Appositions are used to help clarify and/or disambiguate.
Appositions are used to help clarify and/or disambiguate.

Revision as of 09:31, 9 February 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.

Things that add context/explanation/definition/description/name.

In English (and presumably in general), appositional modifiers are typically placed directly next to the things they augment, and typically both parts of the relation are nominals.


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 suggests that in this context we are grouping or distinguishing gender.
  • In The name John stands for ..., name is an appositional modifier for John
  • Arguably, things like
    • putting an abbreviation next to the long form ()
    • putting titles next to names, e.g. "Senator Alice Bob"
  • 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
  • when in doubt whether something is an appositional relation
    • ask whether you could swap the two things


Appositions are used to help clarify and/or disambiguate.


(not to be confused with adpositions)