In grammar, an adposition is any of a wide variety of particles and affixes which are attached to a noun phrase (their object) in order to modify the noun phrase or show its relation to another concept or situation in the same clause. Phrases with an adposition as head are called adpositional phrases. Adpositions are classified by their placement relative to their object; the most common kinds of adpositions are prepositions, which precede their object, and postpositions, which follow them.
Adpositions are very often used to form adverbials, particularly in Germanic languages, such as English.
It is very common for prepositions to determine certain grammatical cases, as in German, Latin and Russian.
Many agglutinative languages like Turkish, Finnish and Inuktitut feature adpositions that are affixed to words. For example, some inflections of the Finnish word auto ("car"):
Although the canonical object of a preposition is a noun phrase, there are cases in which another kind of phrase forms a preposition's object. For instance, in the sentence "Come out from under the bed", the object of the preposition from is another prepositional phrase, under the bed. Furthermore, according to some analyses, in the sentence "I opened the door before he walked in", before is not a conjunction but rather a preposition whose object is a full finite clause (he walked in).
In common speech, the object of a preposition may be implied. For instance, "Get in the car" may be shortened to "Get in." One school of thought believes that it is acceptable to treat prepositions as adjectives, nouns, or adverbs, in which case, the "in" in "Get in" acts as an adverb.
In some languages, including English, there exists a phenomenon known as preposition stranding, wherein a preposition may be separated from its object. In English, some people frown on this practice; see Disputed English grammar.
Stephen Fry once concocted a sentence that supposedly ends in eight consecutive prepositions. He proposed that a child whose mother brought him an unwanted book about Australia to read at bedtime might say, "Oh, Mother! What'd you bring that book I don't like to be read to out of about Down Under up for?" (In reality, however, "out of" is a single two-word preposition; "Down Under" is a noun phrase; and "up" is an adverb.)
There is a tendency for languages to be postpositional when the object of the verb precedes the verb in the unmarked sentences (especially the very common SOV order). However, this is only a tendency (Latin is a counterexample, being typically SOV but employing prepositions). The use of postpositions also correlates with the tendency to place adjectives before the noun they modify.
Postpositions are the norm in many languages in Eurasia.
An ambiposition is a less common type of adposition that may occur as either a preposition or a postposition — these are addressed in Libert (2006). An example is English through in the following:
English does have some constructions that may be viewed as circumpositions, though they are not generally analyzed as such:
In inflected languages, prepositions need not be separate words; their function can instead be performed by a system of inflections on nouns called case or declension. Many linguists consider prepositions and postpositions, like inflectional particles, to all mark case. Due to this functional similarity, there is a small amount of contention regarding the difference between a case marker and an adposition. Otto Jespersen contends that the difference is purely related to form: agglutinative languages have case markers, while isolating languages have adpositions. In The Philosophy of Language, he states that "*here is a fundamental incongruity between the Latin system where the case-distinctions are generally, though not always, expressed in form, and the English system where they are never thus expressed" (p. 178). John Taylor, on the other hand, proposes a definition that restricts case markers to those particles with a nominal profile — that is, the phrase marked by a case marker can serve as a noun, whereas a phrase marked by an adposition cannot.
حروف الجر | Предлог | Araogenn | Forholdsord | Adposition | Adpozicio | Preposición | Préposition | Roimhear | 前置詞 | Praepositio | Preposisjon | Voorzetsel | Przyimek | Preposição | Предлог | Preposition | Preposition | Divancete | 前置詞
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"Adposition".
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