| 释义 | 
		Definition of apposition in English: appositionnoun apəˈzɪʃ(ə)nˌæpəˈzɪʃ(ə)n mass noun1technical The positioning of things side by side or close together. 〈主技〉并置,并列;紧贴,紧靠 Example sentencesExamples -  Hence the plug is a specialized cytoplasmic structure, unlike desmosomes, gap junctions, or septate junctions, which are formed from membrane appositions.
 -  The first seven bead appositions led to spikes in the fiber position that represent adhesive events of varying duration.
 -  These connections consisted of close appositions between nonspecialized areas of the plasma membranes of the 2 cells.
 -  This is compatible with the idea that pyrenes are forced to lie close together in the complex; the pyrene ring is a quite rigid and thus close apposition of two pyrenes is expected to limit ring deformations.
 -  Thus, the expression of these two genes occurs independently in mesoderm and ectoderm without the close apposition of these two tissues that normally occurs in embryos in vivo.
 
 2Grammar  A relationship between two or more words or phrases in which the two units are grammatically parallel and have the same referent (e.g. my friend Sue; the first US president, George Washington). 〔语法〕同位关系 Example sentencesExamples -  By means of the universal ‘I,’ he brings the concepts of performance and political involvement into apposition with the categories of immigrant, exile, and criminal.
 -  Long sentences with subclauses loosely strung together and lots of words in apposition likewise suggest that meaning can be continually modified rather than structured into discrete differential units.
 -  You find, if you change a direction, you get an opposition and an apposition, which creates an irony, which creates a metaphor.
 -  When for instance in a span of three pages we read ‘The darkness, a magician,’ ‘memory, an old flautist,’ and ‘Love, a one-legged bird’ his odd metaphorical appositions come to seem more mannered than inspired.
 
 
 OriginLate Middle English: from late Latin appositio(n-), from apponere 'to apply' (see apposite).    Definition of apposition in US English: appositionnounˌapəˈziSH(ə)nˌæpəˈzɪʃ(ə)n 1technical The positioning of things or the condition of being side by side or close together. 〈主技〉并置,并列;紧贴,紧靠 Example sentencesExamples -  These connections consisted of close appositions between nonspecialized areas of the plasma membranes of the 2 cells.
 -  The first seven bead appositions led to spikes in the fiber position that represent adhesive events of varying duration.
 -  Hence the plug is a specialized cytoplasmic structure, unlike desmosomes, gap junctions, or septate junctions, which are formed from membrane appositions.
 -  Thus, the expression of these two genes occurs independently in mesoderm and ectoderm without the close apposition of these two tissues that normally occurs in embryos in vivo.
 -  This is compatible with the idea that pyrenes are forced to lie close together in the complex; the pyrene ring is a quite rigid and thus close apposition of two pyrenes is expected to limit ring deformations.
 
 2Grammar  A relationship between two or more words or phrases in which the two units are grammatically parallel and have the same referent (e.g. my friend Sue; the first US president, George Washington). 〔语法〕同位关系 Example sentencesExamples -  Long sentences with subclauses loosely strung together and lots of words in apposition likewise suggest that meaning can be continually modified rather than structured into discrete differential units.
 -  You find, if you change a direction, you get an opposition and an apposition, which creates an irony, which creates a metaphor.
 -  When for instance in a span of three pages we read ‘The darkness, a magician,’ ‘memory, an old flautist,’ and ‘Love, a one-legged bird’ his odd metaphorical appositions come to seem more mannered than inspired.
 -  By means of the universal ‘I,’ he brings the concepts of performance and political involvement into apposition with the categories of immigrant, exile, and criminal.
 
 
 OriginLate Middle English: from late Latin appositio(n-), from apponere ‘to apply’ (see apposite).     |