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preposition
(redirected from Adposition)

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preposition

In grammar, a part of speech coming before a noun or a pronoun to show a location (in, on), time (during), or some other relationship (for example, figurative relationships in phrases like ‘by heart’ or ‘on time’).

In the sentence ‘Put the book on the table’, on is a preposition governing the noun ‘table’ and relates the verb ‘put’ to the phrase ‘the table’, indicating where the book should go. Some words of English that are often prepositional in function may, however, be used adverbially, as in the sentences ‘He picked the book up’ and ‘He picked up the book’, in which the ordering is different but the meaning the same. In such cases up is called an adverbial particle and the form pick up is a phrasal verb.



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An Estonian adposition invariably belongs to a noun phrase.
At the end of the 19th century and at the beginning of the 20th century the agent was occasionally conveyed by the construction with the adposition poolt, e.
A B Object Verb Adverb Verb Main Verb Modal Noun Modifier Noun (Adjective, Relative Clause, Adverbial attribute, Genitive attribute) Standard of comparison Comparative adjective Noun phrase Adposition (Preposition, Postposition) Vennemann (1974: 345-346) We have only two ways of ordering elements from column A and column B, AB and BA, in other words, operator + operand and operand + operator.
 
 
 
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