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Preposition and postposition

Prepositions and postpositions, together called adpositions (or broadly, in traditional grammar, simply prepositions),[1] are a class of words used to express spatial or temporal relations (in, under, towards, before) or mark various semantic roles (of, for).[2]

A preposition or postposition typically combines with a noun phrase, this being called its complement, or sometimes object. A preposition comes before its complement; a postposition comes after its complement. English generally has prepositions rather than postpositions – words such as in, under and of precede their objects, such as in England, under the table, of Jane – although there are a few exceptions including "ago" and "notwithstanding", as in "three days ago" and "financial limitations notwithstanding". Some languages that use a different word order have postpositions instead (like Turkic languages) or have both types. The phrase formed by a preposition or postposition together with its complement is called a prepositional phrase (or postpositional phrase, adpositional phrase, etc.) – such phrases usually play an adverbial role in a sentence.

A less common type of adposition is the circumposition, which consists of two parts that appear on each side of the complement. Other terms sometimes used for particular types of adposition include ambiposition, inposition and interposition. Some linguists use the word preposition in place of adposition regardless of the applicable word order.[1]

Terminology edit

The word preposition comes from Latin: prae- prefix (pre- prefix) ("before") and Latin: ponere ("to put"). This refers to the situation in Latin and Greek (and in English), where such words are placed before their complement (except sometimes in Ancient Greek), and are hence "pre-positioned".

In some languages, including Sindhi, Hindustani, Turkish, Hungarian, Korean, and Japanese, the same kinds of words typically come after their complement. To indicate this, they are called postpositions (using the prefix post-, from Latin post meaning "behind, after"). There are also some cases where the function is performed by two parts coming before and after the complement; this is called a circumposition (from Latin circum- prefix "around").

In some languages, for example Finnish, some adpositions can be used as both prepositions and postpositions.

Prepositions, postpositions and circumpositions are collectively known as adpositions (using the Latin prefix ad-, meaning "to"). However, some linguists prefer to use the well-known and longer-established term preposition in place of adposition, irrespective of position relative to the complement.[1]

Grammatical properties edit

An adposition typically combines with exactly one complement, most often a noun phrase (or, in a different analysis, a determiner phrase). In English, this is generally a noun (or something functioning as a noun, e.g., a gerund), together with its specifier and modifiers such as articles, adjectives, etc. The complement is sometimes called the object of the adposition. The resulting phrase, formed by the adposition together with its complement, is called an adpositional phrase or prepositional phrase (PP) (or for specificity, a postpositional or circumpositional phrase).

An adposition establishes a grammatical relationship that links its complement to another word or phrase in the context. It also generally establishes a semantic relationship, which may be spatial (in, on, under, ...), temporal (after, during, ...), or of some other type (of, for, via, ...). The World Atlas of Language Structures treats a word as an adposition if it takes a noun phrase as a complement and indicates the grammatical or semantic relationship of that phrase to the verb in the containing clause.[3]

Some examples of the use of English prepositions are given below. In each case, the prepositional phrase appears in italics, the preposition within it appears in bold, and the preposition's complement is underlined. As demonstrated in some of the examples, more than one prepositional phrase may act as an adjunct to the same word.

  • As an adjunct to a noun:
    • the weather in March
    • cheese from France with live bacteria
  • As a predicative expression (complement of a copula)
    • The key is under the stone.
  • As an adjunct to a verb:
    • sleep throughout the winter
    • danced atop the tables for hours
    • dispense with the formalities (see Semantic functions, above)
  • As an adjunct to an adjective:
    • happy for them
    • sick until recently

In the last of these examples the complement has the form of an adverb, which has been nominalised to serve as a noun phrase; see Different forms of complement, below. Prepositional phrases themselves are sometimes nominalized:

  • In the cellar was chosen as the best place to store the wine.

An adposition may determine the grammatical case of its complement. In English, the complements of prepositions take the objective case where available (from him, not *from he). In Koine Greek, for example, certain prepositions always take their objects in a certain case (e.g., ἐν always takes its object in the dative), while other prepositions may take their object in one of two or more cases, depending on the meaning of the preposition (e.g., διά takes its object in the genitive or the accusative, depending on the meaning). Some languages have cases that are used exclusively after prepositions (prepositional case), or special forms of pronouns for use after prepositions (prepositional pronoun).

The functions of adpositions overlap with those of case markings (for example, the meaning of the English preposition of is expressed in many languages by a genitive case ending), but adpositions are classed as syntactic elements, while case markings are morphological.

Adpositions themselves are usually non-inflecting ("invariant"): they do not have paradigms of the form (such as tense, case, gender, etc.) the same way that verbs, adjectives, and nouns can. There are exceptions, though, such as prepositions that have fused with a pronominal object to form inflected prepositions.

The following properties are characteristic of most adpositional systems:

  • Adpositions are among the most frequently occurring words in languages that have them. For example, one frequency ranking for English word forms[4] begins as follows (prepositions in bold):
the, of, and, to, a, in, that, it, is, was, I, for, on, you, …
  • The most common adpositions are single, monomorphemic words. According to the ranking cited above, for example, the most common English prepositions are on, in, to, by, for, with, at, of, from, as, all of which are single-syllable words and cannot be broken down into smaller units of meaning.
  • Adpositions form a closed class of lexical items and cannot be productively derived from words of other categories.

Classification of adpositions edit

As noted above, adpositions are referred to by various terms, depending on their position relative to the complement.

While the term preposition is sometimes used to denote any adposition, in its stricter meaning it refers only to one which precedes its complement. Examples of this, from English, have been given above; similar examples can be found in many European and other languages, for example:

  • German: mit einer Frau ("with a woman")
  • French: sur la table ("on the table")
  • Polish: na stole ("on the table")
  • Russian: у меня ("in the possession of me" [I have])
  • Khmer: លើក្តារខៀន [ləː kdaːkʰiən] ("on (the) blackboard")
  • Tigrinya: አብ ልዕሊ ጣውላ [abː lɨʕli tʼawla] ("at/on top table"); አብ ትሕቲ ጣውላ [abː tɨħti tʼawla] ("at/on under table")

In certain grammatical constructions, the complement of a preposition may be absent or may be moved from its position directly following the preposition. This may be referred to as preposition stranding (see also below), as in "Whom did you go with?" and "There's only one thing worse than being talked about." There are also some (mainly colloquial) expressions in which a preposition's complement may be omitted, such as "I'm going to the park. Do you want to come with [me]?", and the French Il fait trop froid, je ne suis pas habillée pour ("It's too cold, I'm not dressed for [the situation].") The bolded words in these examples are generally still considered prepositions because when they form a phrase with a complement (in more ordinary constructions) they must appear first.

A postposition follows its complement to form a postpositional phrase. Examples include:

  • Latin: mecum ("with me", literally "me with")
  • Turkish: benimle or benim ile ("with me", literally "my with")
  • Hungarian: fa alatt ("under the tree", literally "tree under")
  • Chinese: 桌子 zhuōzi shàng (lit. "table on"); this is a nominal form which usually requires an additional preposition to form an adverbial phrase (see Chinese locative phrases)
  • English: ten kilometers away, ten months ago (both could be considered adverbs)

Some adpositions can appear either before or after their complement:

  • English: the evidence notwithstanding OR notwithstanding the evidence
  • German: meiner Meinung nach OR nach meiner Meinung ("in my opinion")
  • German: die Straße entlang OR entlang der Straße ("along the road"; here a different case is used when entlang precedes the noun)

An adposition like the above, which can be either a preposition or a postposition, can be called an ambiposition.[5] However, ambiposition may also be used to refer to a circumposition (see below),[6] or to a word that appears to function as a preposition and postposition simultaneously, as in the Vedic Sanskrit construction (noun-1) ā (noun-2), meaning "from (noun-1) to (noun-2)".[7]

Whether a language has primarily prepositions or postpositions is seen as an aspect of its typological classification, and tends to correlate with other properties related to head directionality. Since an adposition is regarded as the head of its phrase, prepositional phrases are head-initial (or right-branching), while postpositional phrases are head-final (or left-branching). There is a tendency for languages that feature postpositions also to have other head-final features, such as verbs that follow their objects; and for languages that feature prepositions to have other head-initial features, such as verbs that precede their objects. This is only a tendency, however; an example of a language that behaves differently is Latin, which employs mostly prepositions, even though it typically places verbs after their objects.

A circumposition consists of two or more parts, positioned on both sides of the complement. Circumpositions are very common in Pashto and Kurdish. The following are examples from Northern Kurdish (Kurmanji):

  • bi ... re ("with")
  • di ... de ("in", for things, not places)
  • di ... re ("via, through")
  • ji ... re ("for")
  • ji ... ve ("since")

Various constructions in other languages might also be analyzed as circumpositional, for example:

  • English: from now on
  • Dutch: naar het einde toe ("towards the end", lit. "to the end to")
  • Chinese: 冰箱 cóng bīngxiāng ("from the inside of the refrigerator", lit. "from refrigerator inside")
  • French: à un détail près ("except for one detail", lit. "at one detail near")
  • Swedish: för tre timmar sedan ("three hours ago", lit. "for three hours since")
  • German: aus dem Zimmer heraus ("out from the room", lit. "from the room out")
  • Tigrinya: ካብ ሕጂ 'ደሓር ("from now on", lit. "from now to later")

Most such phrases, however, can be analyzed as having a different hierarchical structure (such as a prepositional phrase modifying a following adverb). The Chinese example could be analyzed as a prepositional phrase headed by cóng ("from"), taking the locative noun phrase bīngxīang lǐ ("refrigerator inside") as its complement.

An inposition is a rare type of adposition that appears between parts of a complex complement. For example, in the native Californian Timbisha language, the phrase "from a mean cold" can be translated using the word order "cold from mean"—the inposition follows the noun but precedes any following modifiers that form part of the same noun phrase.[8] The Latin word cum is also commonly used as an inposition, as in the phrase summa cum laude, meaning "with highest praise", lit. "highest with praise".

The term interposition has been used[9] for adpositions in structures such as word for word, French coup sur coup ("one after another, repeatedly"), and Russian друг с другом ("one with the other"). This is not a case of an adposition appearing inside its complement, as the two nouns do not form a single phrase (there is no phrase *word word, for example); such uses have more of a coordinating character.

Stranding edit

Preposition stranding is a syntactic construct in which a preposition occurs somewhere other than immediately before its complement. For example, in the English sentence "What did you sit on?" the preposition on has what as its complement, but what is moved to the start of the sentence, because it is an interrogative word. This sentence is much more common and natural than the equivalent sentence without stranding: "On what did you sit?" Preposition stranding is commonly found in English,[10] as well as North Germanic languages such as Swedish. Its existence in German is debated. Preposition stranding is also found in some Niger–Congo languages such as Vata and Gbadi, and in some North American varieties of French.

Some prescriptive English grammars teach that prepositions cannot end a sentence, although there is no rule prohibiting that use.[11][12] Similar rules arose during the rise of classicism, when they were applied to English in imitation of classical languages such as Latin. Otto Jespersen, in his Essentials of English Grammar (first published 1933), commented on this definition-derived rule: "...nor need a preposition (Latin: praepositio) stand before the word it governs (go the fools among (Sh[akespeare]); What are you laughing at?). You might just as well believe that all blackguards are black or that turkeys come from Turkey; many names have either been chosen unfortunately at first or have changed their meanings in the course of time."[13]

Simple versus complex edit

Simple adpositions consist of a single word (on, in, for, towards, etc.). Complex adpositions consist of a group of words that act as one unit. Examples of complex prepositions in English include in spite of, with respect to, except for, by dint of, and next to.

The distinction between simple and complex adpositions is not clear-cut. Many complex adpositions are derived from simple forms (e.g., with + inwithin, by + sidebeside) through grammaticalisation. This change takes time, and during the transitional stages, the adposition acts in some ways like a single word, and in other ways like a multi-word unit. For example, current German orthographic conventions recognize the indeterminate status of certain prepositions, allowing two spellings: anstelle/an Stelle ("instead of"), aufgrund/auf Grund ("because of"), mithilfe/mit Hilfe ("by means of"), zugunsten/zu Gunsten ("in favor of"), zuungunsten/zu Ungunsten ("to the disadvantage of"), zulasten/zu Lasten ("at the expense of").[14]

The distinction between complex adpositions and free combinations of words is not a black-and-white issue: complex adpositions (in English, "prepositional idioms") can be more fossilized or less fossilized. In English, this applies to a number of structures of the form "preposition + (article) + noun + preposition", such as in front of, for the sake of.[15] The following characteristics are good indications that a given combination is "frozen" enough to be considered a complex preposition in English:[16]

  • It contains a word that cannot be used in any other context: by dint of, in lieu of.
  • The first preposition cannot be replaced: with a view to but not *for/without a view to.
  • It is impossible to insert an article, or to use a different article: on account of but not *on an/the account of; for the sake of but not *for a sake of.
  • The range of possible adjectives is very limited: in great favor of, but not *in helpful favor of.
  • The grammatical number of the noun cannot be changed: by virtue of but not *by virtues of.
  • It is impossible to use a possessive determiner: in spite of him, not *in his spite.

Marginal prepositions edit

Marginal prepositions are prepositions that have affinities with other word classes, most notably verbs.[17] Marginal prepositions behave like prepositions but derive from other parts of speech. Some marginal prepositions in English include barring, concerning, considering, excluding, failing, following, including, notwithstanding, regarding, and respecting.

Proper versus improper edit

In descriptions of some languages, prepositions are divided into proper (or essential) and improper (or accidental). A preposition is called improper if it is some other part of speech being used in the same way as a preposition. Examples of simple and complex prepositions that have been so classified include prima di ("before") and davanti (a) ("in front of") in Italian,[18] and ergo ("on account of") and causa ("for the sake of") in Latin.[19] In reference to Ancient Greek, however, an improper preposition is one that cannot also serve as a prefix to a verb.[20]

Different forms of complement edit

As noted above, adpositions typically have noun phrases as complements. This can include nominal clauses and certain types of non-finite verb phrase:

  • We can't agree on whether to have children or not (complement is a nominal clause)
  • Let's think about solving this problem (complement is a gerund phrase)
  • pour encourager les autres (French: "to encourage the others", complement is an infinitive phrase)

The word to when it precedes the infinitive in English is not a preposition, but rather is a grammatical particle outside of any main word class.

In other cases, the complement may have the form of an adjective or adjective phrase, or an adverbial. This may be regarded as a complement representing a different syntactic category, or simply as an atypical form of noun phrase (see nominalization).

  • The scene went from blindingly bright to pitch black (complements are adjective phrases)
  • I worked there until recently (complement is an adverb)
  • Come out from under the bed (complement is an adverbial)

In the last example, the complement of the preposition from is in fact another prepositional phrase. The resulting sequence of two prepositions (from under) may be regarded as a complex preposition; in some languages, such a sequence may be represented by a single word, as Russian из-под iz-pod ("from under").

Some adpositions appear to combine with two complements:

  • With Sammy president, we can all come out of hiding again.
  • For Sammy to become president, they'd have to seriously modify the Constitution.

It is more commonly assumed, however, that Sammy and the following predicate forms a "small clause", which then becomes the single complement of the preposition. (In the first example, a word such as as may be considered to have been elided, which, if present, would clarify the grammatical relationship.)

Semantic functions edit

Adpositions can be used to express a wide range of semantic relations between their complement and the rest of the context. The relations expressed may be spatial (denoting location or direction), temporal (denoting position in time), or relations expressing comparison, content, agent, instrument, means, manner, cause, purpose, reference, etc.

Most common adpositions are highly polysemous (they have various different meanings). In many cases, a primary, spatial meaning becomes extended to non-spatial uses by metaphorical or other processes. Because of the variety of meanings, a single adposition often has many possible equivalents in another language, depending on the exact context in which it is used; this can cause significant difficulties in foreign language learning. Usage can also vary between dialects of the same language (for example, American English has on the weekend, whereas British English uses at the weekend).

In some contexts (as in the case of some phrasal verbs) the choice of adposition may be determined by another element in the construction or be fixed by the construction as a whole. Here the adposition may have little independent semantic content of its own, and there may be no clear reason why the particular adposition is used rather than another. Examples of such expressions are:

  • English: dispense with, listen to, insist on, proud of, good at
  • Russian: otvechat' na vopros ("answer the question", literally "answer on the question"), obvinenie v obmane ("accusation of [literally: in] fraud")
  • Spanish: soñar con ganar el título ("dream about [lit. with] winning the title"), consistir en dos grupos ("consist of [lit. in] two groups")

Prepositions sometimes mark roles that may be considered largely grammatical:

Spatial meanings of adpositions may be either directional or static. A directional meaning usually involves motion in a particular direction ("Kay went to the store"), the direction in which something leads or points ("A path into the woods"), or the extent of something ("The fog stretched from London to Paris"). A static meaning indicates only a location ("at the store", "behind the chair", "on the moon"). Some prepositions can have both uses: "he sat in the water" (static); "he jumped in the water" (probably directional). In some languages, the case of the complement varies depending on the meaning, as with several prepositions in German, such as in:

  • in seinem Zimmer ("in his room", static meaning, takes the dative)
  • in sein Zimmer ("into his room", directional meaning, takes the accusative)

In English and many other languages, prepositional phrases with static meaning are commonly used as predicative expressions after a copula ("Bob is at the store"); this may happen with some directional prepositions as well ("Bob is from Australia"), but this is less common. Directional prepositional phrases combine mostly with verbs that indicate movement ("Jay is going into her bedroom", but not *"Jay is lying down into her bedroom").

Directional meanings can be further divided into telic and atelic. Telic prepositional phrases imply movement all the way to the endpoint ("she ran to the fence"), while atelic ones do not ("she ran towards the fence").[21]

Static meanings can be divided into projective and non-projective, where projective meanings are those whose understanding requires knowledge of the perspective or point of view. For example, the meaning of "behind the rock" is likely to depend on the position of the speaker (projective), whereas the meaning of "on the desk" is not (non-projective). Sometimes the interpretation is ambiguous, as in "behind the house", which may mean either at the natural back of the house or on the opposite side of the house from the speaker.[22]

Overlaps with other categories edit

Adverbs and particles edit

There are often similarities in form between adpositions and adverbs. Some adverbs are derived from the fusion of a preposition and its complement (such as downstairs, from down (the) stairs, and underground, from under (the) ground). Some words can function both as adverbs and as prepositions, such as inside, aboard, underneath (for instance, one can say "go inside", with adverbial use, or "go inside the house", with prepositional use). Such cases are analogous to verbs that can be used either transitively or intransitively, and the adverbial forms might therefore be analyzed as "intransitive prepositions". This analysis[23] could also be extended to other adverbs, such as here (this place), there (that place), afterward, etc., even though these never take complements.

Many English phrasal verbs contain particles that are used adverbially, even though they mostly have the form of a preposition (such words may be called prepositional adverbs). Examples are on in carry on, get on, etc., and over in take over, fall over, and so on. The equivalents in Dutch and German are separable prefixes, which also often have the same form as prepositions: for example, Dutch aanbieden and German anbieten (both meaning "to offer") contain the separable prefix aan/an, which is also a preposition meaning "on" or "to".

Conjunctions edit

Some words can be used both as adpositions and as subordinating conjunctions:

  • (preposition) before/after/since the end of the summer
  • (conjunction) before/after/since the summer ended
  • (preposition) It looks like another rainy day
  • (conjunction) It looks like it's going to rain again today

It would be possible to analyze such conjunctions (or even other subordinating conjunctions) as prepositions that take an entire clause as a complement.

Verbs edit

In some languages, including a number of Chinese varieties, many of the words that serve as prepositions can also be used as verbs. For instance, in Standard Chinese, 到 dào can be used in either a prepositional or a verbal sense:

  • 我到北京去 wǒ dào Běijīng qù ("I go to Beijing"; , meaning "to go", is the main verb, dào is prepositional meaning "to")
  • 我到了 wǒ dào le ("I have arrived"; dào is the main verb, meaning "to arrive")

Because of this overlap, and the fact that a sequence of prepositional phrases and verb phrases often resembles a serial verb construction, Chinese prepositions (and those of other languages with similar grammatical structures) are often referred to as coverbs.

As noted in previous sections, Chinese can also be said to have postpositions, although these can be analyzed as nominal (noun) elements. For more information, see the article on Chinese grammar, particularly the sections on coverbs and locative phrases.

Case affixes edit

Some grammatical case markings have a similar function to adpositions; a case affix in one language may be equivalent in meaning to a preposition or postposition in another. For example, in English, the agent of a passive construction is marked by the preposition by, while in Russian it is marked by the use of the instrumental case. Sometimes such equivalences exist within a single language; for example, the genitive case in German is often interchangeable with a phrase using the preposition von (just as in English, the preposition of is often interchangeable with the possessive suffix 's).

Adpositions combine syntactically with their complement, whereas case markings combine with a noun morphologically. In some instances it may not be clear which applies; the following are some possible means of making such a distinction:

  • Two adpositions can usually be joined with a coordinating conjunction and share a single complement (of and for the people), whereas this is generally not possible with case affixes;
  • One adposition can usually combine with two coordinated complements (of the city and the world), whereas a case affix would need to be repeated with each noun (Latin urbis et orbis, not *urb- et orbis);
  • Case markings combine primarily with nouns, whereas adpositions can combine with (nominalized) phrases of different categories;
  • A case marking usually appears directly on the noun, but an adposition can be separated from the noun by other words;
  • Within the noun phrase, determiners and adjectives may agree with the noun in case (case spreading), but an adposition only appears once;
  • A language can have hundreds of adpositions (including complex adpositions), but no language has that many distinct morphological cases.

Even so, a clear distinction cannot always be made. For example, the post-nominal elements in Japanese and Korean are sometimes called case particles and sometimes postpositions. Sometimes they are analyzed as two different groups because they have different characteristics (e.g., the ability to combine with focus particles), but in such analysis, it is unclear which words should fall into which group.

Turkish, Finnish and Hungarian have both extensive case-marking and postpositions, but there is evidence to help distinguish the two:

  • Turkish: (case) sinemaya (cinema-dative, "to the cinema") vs. (postposition) sinema için ("for the cinema")
  • Finnish: (case) talossa (house-inessive, "in the house") vs. (postposition) "talon edessä (house-genitive in front, "in front of the house")
  • Hungarian: (case) tetőn (roof-superessive, "on the roof") vs. (postposition) "tető alatt ("under the roof")

In these examples, the case markings form a word with their hosts (as shown by vowel harmony, other word-internal effects and agreement of adjectives in Finnish), while the postpositions are independent words. As is seen in the last example, adpositions are often used in conjunction with case affixes – in languages that have a case, a given adposition usually takes a complement in a particular case, and sometimes (as has been seen above) the choice of the case helps specify the meaning of the adposition.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c An example is Huddleston & Pullum (2002) ("CGEL"), whose choice of terms is discussed on p. 602.
  2. ^ Huddleston & Pullum (2002), chapter 7.
  3. ^ "Chapter 85: Order of Adposition and Noun Phrase". World Atlas of Language Structures. Retrieved 29 August 2011.
  4. ^ "Wordcount · Tracking the Way We Use Language". www.wordcount.org.
  5. ^ See Reindl (2001), Libert (2006).
  6. ^ Gernot Windfuhr, Iranian Languages, Routledge 2013 p. 736.
  7. ^ Vít Bubeník, From Case to Adposition: The Development of Configurational Syntax in Indo-European Languages, John Benjamins Publishing 2006, p. 109.
  8. ^ Matthew S. Dryer, "Order of Adposition and Noun Phrase", in The World Atlas of Language Structures Online. Retrieved 2015-01-01.
  9. ^ See Melis (2003), p. 22. The term is used here in French, and in reference to the French language.
  10. ^ Lundin, Leigh (2007-09-23). "The Power of Prepositions". On Writing. Cairo: Criminal Brief.
  11. ^ Fogarty, Mignon (4 March 2010). "Top Ten Grammar Myths". Grammar Girl: Quick and Dirty Tips for Better Writing. Retrieved 27 March 2010.
  12. ^ O'Conner, Patricia T.; Kellerman, Stewart (2009). Origins of the Specious: Myths and Misconceptions of the English Language. New York: Random House. p. 17. ISBN 978-1-4000-6660-5.
  13. ^ Jespersen, Otto (1962). Essentials of English Grammar. London: George Allen & Unwin. p. 69. ISBN 1135662118.
  14. ^ Duden: Neue Rechtschreibung Crashkurs (Regel 11 2008-03-12 at the Wayback Machine).
  15. ^ CGEL, p. 618ff; Pullum (2005); Huddleston and Pullum (2005), pp. 146-47.
  16. ^ Quirk and Mulholland (1964).
  17. ^ Quirk, Randolph, Sidney Greenbaum, Jan Svartvik, & Geoffrey Leech. 1985. A comprehensive grammar of the English language. London: Longman. 667-68.
  18. ^ Maria Franca Zuccarello, Edvaldo Sampaio Belizário, As preposições acidentais (preposizioni improprie) italianas e seus termos correpondentes em português, CNLF, Vol. XII No. 16, p. 72.
  19. ^ Harm Pinkster, On Latin Adverbs, Amsterdam University Press 2005, p. 148.
  20. ^ Stanley E. Porter, Idioms of the Greek New Testament, A&C Black 1992, p. 140.
  21. ^ Zwarts, Joost. 2005. "Prepositional Aspect and the Algebra of Paths." Linguistics and Philosophy 28.6, 739–779.
  22. ^ Creswell, Max. 1978. "Prepositions and points of view." Linguistics and Philosophy, 2: 1–41.
  23. ^ See for example CGEL, pp. 612–16.

Bibliography edit

  • Haspelmath, Martin. (2003) "Adpositions". International Encyclopedia of Linguistics. 2nd ed. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-513977-1.
  • Huddleston, Rodney, and Geoffrey K. Pullum. (2002) The Cambridge Grammar of the English Language. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-43146-8.
  • Huddleston, Rodney; Pullum, Geoffrey K.; Reynolds, Brett (2022). A Student's Introduction to English Grammar (2nd ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-009-08574-8.
  • Koopman, Hilda. (2000) "Prepositions, postpositions, circumpositions, and particles". In The Syntax of Specifiers and Heads, pp. 204–260. London: Routledge.
  • Libert, Alan R. (2006) Ambipositions. LINCOM studies in language typology (No. 13). LINCOM. ISBN 3-89586-747-0.
  • Maling, Joan. (1983) "Transitive adjectives: A case of categorial reanalysis". In F. Heny and B. Richards (eds), Linguistic Categories: Auxiliaries and Related Puzzles, Vol. 1, pp. 253–289. Dordrecht: Reidel.
  • Melis, Ludo. (2003) La préposition en français. Gap: Ophrys.
  • Pullum, Geoffrey K. (2005) "Phrasal Prepositions in a Civil Tone." Language Log. Accessed 9 September 2007.
  • Quirk, Randolph, and Joan Mulholland. (1964) "Complex Prepositions and Related Sequences". English Studies, suppl. to vol. 45, pp. 64–73.
  • Rauh, Gisa. (1991) Approaches to Prepositions. Tübingen: Gunter Narr.
  • Reindl, Donald F. (2001) "Areal Effects on the Preservation and Genesis of Slavic Postpositions". In Lj. Šarić and D. F. Reindl On Prepositions (= Studia Slavica Oldenburgensia 8), pp. 85–100. Oldenburg: Carl-von-Ossietzky-Universitat Oldenburg.

External links edit

  • Some prepositions at Purdue Online Writing Lab

preposition, postposition, preposition, redirects, here, confused, with, proposition, this, article, need, rewritten, comply, with, wikipedia, quality, standards, help, talk, page, contain, suggestions, september, 2020, prepositions, postpositions, together, c. Preposition redirects here Not to be confused with proposition This article may need to be rewritten to comply with Wikipedia s quality standards You can help The talk page may contain suggestions September 2020 Prepositions and postpositions together called adpositions or broadly in traditional grammar simply prepositions 1 are a class of words used to express spatial or temporal relations in under towards before or mark various semantic roles of for 2 A preposition or postposition typically combines with a noun phrase this being called its complement or sometimes object A preposition comes before its complement a postposition comes after its complement English generally has prepositions rather than postpositions words such as in under and of precede their objects such as in England under the table of Jane although there are a few exceptions including ago and notwithstanding as in three days ago and financial limitations notwithstanding Some languages that use a different word order have postpositions instead like Turkic languages or have both types The phrase formed by a preposition or postposition together with its complement is called a prepositional phrase or postpositional phrase adpositional phrase etc such phrases usually play an adverbial role in a sentence A less common type of adposition is the circumposition which consists of two parts that appear on each side of the complement Other terms sometimes used for particular types of adposition include ambiposition inposition and interposition Some linguists use the word preposition in place of adposition regardless of the applicable word order 1 Further information English prepositions Contents 1 Terminology 2 Grammatical properties 3 Classification of adpositions 4 Stranding 5 Simple versus complex 6 Marginal prepositions 7 Proper versus improper 8 Different forms of complement 9 Semantic functions 10 Overlaps with other categories 10 1 Adverbs and particles 10 2 Conjunctions 10 3 Verbs 10 4 Case affixes 11 See also 12 References 13 Bibliography 14 External linksTerminology editThe word preposition comes from Latin prae prefix pre prefix before and Latin ponere to put This refers to the situation in Latin and Greek and in English where such words are placed before their complement except sometimes in Ancient Greek and are hence pre positioned In some languages including Sindhi Hindustani Turkish Hungarian Korean and Japanese the same kinds of words typically come after their complement To indicate this they are called postpositions using the prefix post from Latin post meaning behind after There are also some cases where the function is performed by two parts coming before and after the complement this is called a circumposition from Latin circum prefix around In some languages for example Finnish some adpositions can be used as both prepositions and postpositions Prepositions postpositions and circumpositions are collectively known as adpositions using the Latin prefix ad meaning to However some linguists prefer to use the well known and longer established term preposition in place of adposition irrespective of position relative to the complement 1 Grammatical properties editAn adposition typically combines with exactly one complement most often a noun phrase or in a different analysis a determiner phrase In English this is generally a noun or something functioning as a noun e g a gerund together with its specifier and modifiers such as articles adjectives etc The complement is sometimes called the object of the adposition The resulting phrase formed by the adposition together with its complement is called an adpositional phrase or prepositional phrase PP or for specificity a postpositional or circumpositional phrase An adposition establishes a grammatical relationship that links its complement to another word or phrase in the context It also generally establishes a semantic relationship which may be spatial in on under temporal after during or of some other type of for via The World Atlas of Language Structures treats a word as an adposition if it takes a noun phrase as a complement and indicates the grammatical or semantic relationship of that phrase to the verb in the containing clause 3 Some examples of the use of English prepositions are given below In each case the prepositional phrase appears in italics the preposition within it appears in bold and the preposition s complement is underlined As demonstrated in some of the examples more than one prepositional phrase may act as an adjunct to the same word As an adjunct to a noun the weather in March cheese from France with live bacteria As a predicative expression complement of a copula The key is under the stone As an adjunct to a verb sleep throughout the winter danced atop the tables for hours dispense with the formalities see Semantic functions above As an adjunct to an adjective happy for them sick until recentlyIn the last of these examples the complement has the form of an adverb which has been nominalised to serve as a noun phrase see Different forms of complement below Prepositional phrases themselves are sometimes nominalized In the cellar was chosen as the best place to store the wine An adposition may determine the grammatical case of its complement In English the complements of prepositions take the objective case where available from him not from he In Koine Greek for example certain prepositions always take their objects in a certain case e g ἐn always takes its object in the dative while other prepositions may take their object in one of two or more cases depending on the meaning of the preposition e g dia takes its object in the genitive or the accusative depending on the meaning Some languages have cases that are used exclusively after prepositions prepositional case or special forms of pronouns for use after prepositions prepositional pronoun The functions of adpositions overlap with those of case markings for example the meaning of the English preposition of is expressed in many languages by a genitive case ending but adpositions are classed as syntactic elements while case markings are morphological Adpositions themselves are usually non inflecting invariant they do not have paradigms of the form such as tense case gender etc the same way that verbs adjectives and nouns can There are exceptions though such as prepositions that have fused with a pronominal object to form inflected prepositions The following properties are characteristic of most adpositional systems Adpositions are among the most frequently occurring words in languages that have them For example one frequency ranking for English word forms 4 begins as follows prepositions in bold the of and to a in that it is was I for on you dd The most common adpositions are single monomorphemic words According to the ranking cited above for example the most common English prepositions are on in to by for with at of from as all of which are single syllable words and cannot be broken down into smaller units of meaning Adpositions form a closed class of lexical items and cannot be productively derived from words of other categories Classification of adpositions editAs noted above adpositions are referred to by various terms depending on their position relative to the complement While the term preposition is sometimes used to denote any adposition in its stricter meaning it refers only to one which precedes its complement Examples of this from English have been given above similar examples can be found in many European and other languages for example German mit einer Frau with a woman French sur la table on the table Polish na stole on the table Russian u menya in the possession of me I have Khmer ល ក ត រខ ន leː kdaːkʰien on the blackboard Tigrinya አብ ልዕሊ ጣውላ abː lɨʕli tʼawla at on top table አብ ትሕቲ ጣውላ abː tɨħti tʼawla at on under table In certain grammatical constructions the complement of a preposition may be absent or may be moved from its position directly following the preposition This may be referred to as preposition stranding see also below as in Whom did you go with and There s only one thing worse than being talked about There are also some mainly colloquial expressions in which a preposition s complement may be omitted such as I m going to the park Do you want to come with me and the French Il fait trop froid je ne suis pas habillee pour It s too cold I m not dressed for the situation The bolded words in these examples are generally still considered prepositions because when they form a phrase with a complement in more ordinary constructions they must appear first A postposition follows its complement to form a postpositional phrase Examples include Latin mecum with me literally me with Turkish benimle or benim ile with me literally my with Hungarian fa alatt under the tree literally tree under Chinese 桌子上 zhuōzi shang lit table on this is a nominal form which usually requires an additional preposition to form an adverbial phrase see Chinese locative phrases English ten kilometers away ten months ago both could be considered adverbs Some adpositions can appear either before or after their complement English the evidence notwithstanding OR notwithstanding the evidence German meiner Meinung nach OR nach meiner Meinung in my opinion German die Strasse entlang OR entlang der Strasse along the road here a different case is used when entlang precedes the noun An adposition like the above which can be either a preposition or a postposition can be called an ambiposition 5 However ambiposition may also be used to refer to a circumposition see below 6 or to a word that appears to function as a preposition and postposition simultaneously as in the Vedic Sanskrit construction noun 1 a noun 2 meaning from noun 1 to noun 2 7 Whether a language has primarily prepositions or postpositions is seen as an aspect of its typological classification and tends to correlate with other properties related to head directionality Since an adposition is regarded as the head of its phrase prepositional phrases are head initial or right branching while postpositional phrases are head final or left branching There is a tendency for languages that feature postpositions also to have other head final features such as verbs that follow their objects and for languages that feature prepositions to have other head initial features such as verbs that precede their objects This is only a tendency however an example of a language that behaves differently is Latin which employs mostly prepositions even though it typically places verbs after their objects A circumposition consists of two or more parts positioned on both sides of the complement Circumpositions are very common in Pashto and Kurdish The following are examples from Northern Kurdish Kurmanji bi re with di de in for things not places di re via through ji re for ji ve since Various constructions in other languages might also be analyzed as circumpositional for example English from now on Dutch naar het einde toe towards the end lit to the end to Chinese 从冰箱里 cong bingxiang lǐ from the inside of the refrigerator lit from refrigerator inside French a un detail pres except for one detail lit at one detail near Swedish for tre timmar sedan three hours ago lit for three hours since German aus dem Zimmer heraus out from the room lit from the room out Tigrinya ካብ ሕጂ ንደሓር from now on lit from now to later Most such phrases however can be analyzed as having a different hierarchical structure such as a prepositional phrase modifying a following adverb The Chinese example could be analyzed as a prepositional phrase headed by cong from taking the locative noun phrase bingxiang lǐ refrigerator inside as its complement An inposition is a rare type of adposition that appears between parts of a complex complement For example in the native Californian Timbisha language the phrase from a mean cold can be translated using the word order cold from mean the inposition follows the noun but precedes any following modifiers that form part of the same noun phrase 8 The Latin word cum is also commonly used as an inposition as in the phrase summa cum laude meaning with highest praise lit highest with praise The term interposition has been used 9 for adpositions in structures such as word for word French coup sur coup one after another repeatedly and Russian drug s drugom one with the other This is not a case of an adposition appearing inside its complement as the two nouns do not form a single phrase there is no phrase word word for example such uses have more of a coordinating character Stranding editMain article Preposition stranding Preposition stranding is a syntactic construct in which a preposition occurs somewhere other than immediately before its complement For example in the English sentence What did you sit on the preposition on has what as its complement but what is moved to the start of the sentence because it is an interrogative word This sentence is much more common and natural than the equivalent sentence without stranding On what did you sit Preposition stranding is commonly found in English 10 as well as North Germanic languages such as Swedish Its existence in German is debated Preposition stranding is also found in some Niger Congo languages such as Vata and Gbadi and in some North American varieties of French Some prescriptive English grammars teach that prepositions cannot end a sentence although there is no rule prohibiting that use 11 12 Similar rules arose during the rise of classicism when they were applied to English in imitation of classical languages such as Latin Otto Jespersen in his Essentials of English Grammar first published 1933 commented on this definition derived rule nor need a preposition Latin praepositio stand before the word it governs go the fools among Sh akespeare What are you laughing at You might just as well believe that all blackguards are black or that turkeys come from Turkey many names have either been chosen unfortunately at first or have changed their meanings in the course of time 13 Simple versus complex editSimple adpositions consist of a single word on in for towards etc Complex adpositions consist of a group of words that act as one unit Examples of complex prepositions in English include in spite of with respect to except for by dint of and next to The distinction between simple and complex adpositions is not clear cut Many complex adpositions are derived from simple forms e g with in within by side beside through grammaticalisation This change takes time and during the transitional stages the adposition acts in some ways like a single word and in other ways like a multi word unit For example current German orthographic conventions recognize the indeterminate status of certain prepositions allowing two spellings anstelle an Stelle instead of aufgrund auf Grund because of mithilfe mit Hilfe by means of zugunsten zu Gunsten in favor of zuungunsten zu Ungunsten to the disadvantage of zulasten zu Lasten at the expense of 14 The distinction between complex adpositions and free combinations of words is not a black and white issue complex adpositions in English prepositional idioms can be more fossilized or less fossilized In English this applies to a number of structures of the form preposition article noun preposition such as in front of for the sake of 15 The following characteristics are good indications that a given combination is frozen enough to be considered a complex preposition in English 16 It contains a word that cannot be used in any other context by dint of in lieu of The first preposition cannot be replaced with a view to but not for without a view to It is impossible to insert an article or to use a different article on account of but not on an the account of for the sake of but not for a sake of The range of possible adjectives is very limited in great favor of but not in helpful favor of The grammatical number of the noun cannot be changed by virtue of but not by virtues of It is impossible to use a possessive determiner in spite of him not in his spite Marginal prepositions editMarginal prepositions are prepositions that have affinities with other word classes most notably verbs 17 Marginal prepositions behave like prepositions but derive from other parts of speech Some marginal prepositions in English include barring concerning considering excluding failing following including notwithstanding regarding and respecting Proper versus improper editIn descriptions of some languages prepositions are divided into proper or essential and improper or accidental A preposition is called improper if it is some other part of speech being used in the same way as a preposition Examples of simple and complex prepositions that have been so classified include prima di before and davanti a in front of in Italian 18 and ergo on account of and causa for the sake of in Latin 19 In reference to Ancient Greek however an improper preposition is one that cannot also serve as a prefix to a verb 20 Different forms of complement editAs noted above adpositions typically have noun phrases as complements This can include nominal clauses and certain types of non finite verb phrase We can t agree on whether to have children or not complement is a nominal clause Let s think about solving this problem complement is a gerund phrase pour encourager les autres French to encourage the others complement is an infinitive phrase The word to when it precedes the infinitive in English is not a preposition but rather is a grammatical particle outside of any main word class In other cases the complement may have the form of an adjective or adjective phrase or an adverbial This may be regarded as a complement representing a different syntactic category or simply as an atypical form of noun phrase see nominalization The scene went from blindingly bright to pitch black complements are adjective phrases I worked there until recently complement is an adverb Come out from under the bed complement is an adverbial In the last example the complement of the preposition from is in fact another prepositional phrase The resulting sequence of two prepositions from under may be regarded as a complex preposition in some languages such a sequence may be represented by a single word as Russian iz pod iz pod from under Some adpositions appear to combine with two complements With Sammy president we can all come out of hiding again For Sammy to become president they d have to seriously modify the Constitution It is more commonly assumed however that Sammy and the following predicate forms a small clause which then becomes the single complement of the preposition In the first example a word such as as may be considered to have been elided which if present would clarify the grammatical relationship Semantic functions editAdpositions can be used to express a wide range of semantic relations between their complement and the rest of the context The relations expressed may be spatial denoting location or direction temporal denoting position in time or relations expressing comparison content agent instrument means manner cause purpose reference etc Most common adpositions are highly polysemous they have various different meanings In many cases a primary spatial meaning becomes extended to non spatial uses by metaphorical or other processes Because of the variety of meanings a single adposition often has many possible equivalents in another language depending on the exact context in which it is used this can cause significant difficulties in foreign language learning Usage can also vary between dialects of the same language for example American English has on the weekend whereas British English uses at the weekend In some contexts as in the case of some phrasal verbs the choice of adposition may be determined by another element in the construction or be fixed by the construction as a whole Here the adposition may have little independent semantic content of its own and there may be no clear reason why the particular adposition is used rather than another Examples of such expressions are English dispense with listen to insist on proud of good at Russian otvechat na vopros answer the question literally answer on the question obvinenie v obmane accusation of literally in fraud Spanish sonar con ganar el titulo dream about lit with winning the title consistir en dos grupos consist of lit in two groups Prepositions sometimes mark roles that may be considered largely grammatical possession in a broad sense the pen of my aunt sometimes marked by genitive or possessive forms the agent in passive constructions killed by a lone gunman the recipient of a transfer give it to him sometimes marked by a dative or an indirect object Spatial meanings of adpositions may be either directional or static A directional meaning usually involves motion in a particular direction Kay went to the store the direction in which something leads or points A path into the woods or the extent of something The fog stretched from London to Paris A static meaning indicates only a location at the store behind the chair on the moon Some prepositions can have both uses he sat in the water static he jumped in the water probably directional In some languages the case of the complement varies depending on the meaning as with several prepositions in German such as in in seinem Zimmer in his room static meaning takes the dative in sein Zimmer into his room directional meaning takes the accusative In English and many other languages prepositional phrases with static meaning are commonly used as predicative expressions after a copula Bob is at the store this may happen with some directional prepositions as well Bob is from Australia but this is less common Directional prepositional phrases combine mostly with verbs that indicate movement Jay is going into her bedroom but not Jay is lying down into her bedroom Directional meanings can be further divided into telic and atelic Telic prepositional phrases imply movement all the way to the endpoint she ran to the fence while atelic ones do not she ran towards the fence 21 Static meanings can be divided into projective and non projective where projective meanings are those whose understanding requires knowledge of the perspective or point of view For example the meaning of behind the rock is likely to depend on the position of the speaker projective whereas the meaning of on the desk is not non projective Sometimes the interpretation is ambiguous as in behind the house which may mean either at the natural back of the house or on the opposite side of the house from the speaker 22 Overlaps with other categories editAdverbs and particles edit There are often similarities in form between adpositions and adverbs Some adverbs are derived from the fusion of a preposition and its complement such as downstairs from down the stairs and underground from under the ground Some words can function both as adverbs and as prepositions such as inside aboard underneath for instance one can say go inside with adverbial use or go inside the house with prepositional use Such cases are analogous to verbs that can be used either transitively or intransitively and the adverbial forms might therefore be analyzed as intransitive prepositions This analysis 23 could also be extended to other adverbs such as here this place there that place afterward etc even though these never take complements Many English phrasal verbs contain particles that are used adverbially even though they mostly have the form of a preposition such words may be called prepositional adverbs Examples are on in carry on get on etc and over in take over fall over and so on The equivalents in Dutch and German are separable prefixes which also often have the same form as prepositions for example Dutch aanbieden and German anbieten both meaning to offer contain the separable prefix aan an which is also a preposition meaning on or to Conjunctions edit Some words can be used both as adpositions and as subordinating conjunctions preposition before after since the end of the summer conjunction before after since the summer ended preposition It looks like another rainy day conjunction It looks like it s going to rain again todayIt would be possible to analyze such conjunctions or even other subordinating conjunctions as prepositions that take an entire clause as a complement Verbs edit In some languages including a number of Chinese varieties many of the words that serve as prepositions can also be used as verbs For instance in Standard Chinese 到 dao can be used in either a prepositional or a verbal sense 我到北京去 wǒ dao Beijing qu I go to Beijing qu meaning to go is the main verb dao is prepositional meaning to 我到了 wǒ dao le I have arrived dao is the main verb meaning to arrive Because of this overlap and the fact that a sequence of prepositional phrases and verb phrases often resembles a serial verb construction Chinese prepositions and those of other languages with similar grammatical structures are often referred to as coverbs As noted in previous sections Chinese can also be said to have postpositions although these can be analyzed as nominal noun elements For more information see the article on Chinese grammar particularly the sections on coverbs and locative phrases Case affixes edit Some grammatical case markings have a similar function to adpositions a case affix in one language may be equivalent in meaning to a preposition or postposition in another For example in English the agent of a passive construction is marked by the preposition by while in Russian it is marked by the use of the instrumental case Sometimes such equivalences exist within a single language for example the genitive case in German is often interchangeable with a phrase using the preposition von just as in English the preposition of is often interchangeable with the possessive suffix s Adpositions combine syntactically with their complement whereas case markings combine with a noun morphologically In some instances it may not be clear which applies the following are some possible means of making such a distinction Two adpositions can usually be joined with a coordinating conjunction and share a single complement of and for the people whereas this is generally not possible with case affixes One adposition can usually combine with two coordinated complements of the city and the world whereas a case affix would need to be repeated with each noun Latin urbis et orbis not urb et orbis Case markings combine primarily with nouns whereas adpositions can combine with nominalized phrases of different categories A case marking usually appears directly on the noun but an adposition can be separated from the noun by other words Within the noun phrase determiners and adjectives may agree with the noun in case case spreading but an adposition only appears once A language can have hundreds of adpositions including complex adpositions but no language has that many distinct morphological cases Even so a clear distinction cannot always be made For example the post nominal elements in Japanese and Korean are sometimes called case particles and sometimes postpositions Sometimes they are analyzed as two different groups because they have different characteristics e g the ability to combine with focus particles but in such analysis it is unclear which words should fall into which group Turkish Finnish and Hungarian have both extensive case marking and postpositions but there is evidence to help distinguish the two Turkish case sinemaya cinema dative to the cinema vs postposition sinema icin for the cinema Finnish case talossa house inessive in the house vs postposition talon edessa house genitive in front in front of the house Hungarian case teton roof superessive on the roof vs postposition teto alatt under the roof In these examples the case markings form a word with their hosts as shown by vowel harmony other word internal effects and agreement of adjectives in Finnish while the postpositions are independent words As is seen in the last example adpositions are often used in conjunction with case affixes in languages that have a case a given adposition usually takes a complement in a particular case and sometimes as has been seen above the choice of the case helps specify the meaning of the adposition See also editEnglish prepositions List of English prepositions Old English prepositions Spanish prepositions Japanese particles Relational nounReferences edit a b c An example is Huddleston amp Pullum 2002 CGEL whose choice of terms is discussed on p 602 Huddleston amp Pullum 2002 chapter 7 Chapter 85 Order of Adposition and Noun Phrase World Atlas of Language Structures Retrieved 29 August 2011 Wordcount Tracking the Way We Use Language www wordcount org See Reindl 2001 Libert 2006 Gernot Windfuhr Iranian Languages Routledge 2013 p 736 Vit Bubenik From Case to Adposition The Development of Configurational Syntax in Indo European Languages John Benjamins Publishing 2006 p 109 Matthew S Dryer Order of Adposition and Noun Phrase in The World Atlas of Language Structures Online Retrieved 2015 01 01 See Melis 2003 p 22 The term is used here in French and in reference to the French language Lundin Leigh 2007 09 23 The Power of Prepositions On Writing Cairo Criminal Brief Fogarty Mignon 4 March 2010 Top Ten Grammar Myths Grammar Girl Quick and Dirty Tips for Better Writing Retrieved 27 March 2010 O Conner Patricia T Kellerman Stewart 2009 Origins of the Specious Myths and Misconceptions of the English Language New York Random House p 17 ISBN 978 1 4000 6660 5 Jespersen Otto 1962 Essentials of English Grammar London George Allen amp Unwin p 69 ISBN 1135662118 Duden Neue Rechtschreibung Crashkurs Regel 11 Archived 2008 03 12 at the Wayback Machine CGEL p 618ff Pullum 2005 Huddleston and Pullum 2005 pp 146 47 Quirk and Mulholland 1964 Quirk Randolph Sidney Greenbaum Jan Svartvik amp Geoffrey Leech 1985 A comprehensive grammar of the English language London Longman 667 68 Maria Franca Zuccarello Edvaldo Sampaio Belizario As preposicoes acidentais preposizioni improprie italianas e seus termos correpondentes em portugues CNLF Vol XII No 16 p 72 Harm Pinkster On Latin Adverbs Amsterdam University Press 2005 p 148 Stanley E Porter Idioms of the Greek New Testament A amp C Black 1992 p 140 Zwarts Joost 2005 Prepositional Aspect and the Algebra of Paths Linguistics and Philosophy 28 6 739 779 Creswell Max 1978 Prepositions and points of view Linguistics and Philosophy 2 1 41 See for example CGEL pp 612 16 Bibliography editHaspelmath Martin 2003 Adpositions International Encyclopedia of Linguistics 2nd ed New York Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 513977 1 Huddleston Rodney and Geoffrey K Pullum 2002 The Cambridge Grammar of the English Language Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 43146 8 Huddleston Rodney Pullum Geoffrey K Reynolds Brett 2022 A Student s Introduction to English Grammar 2nd ed Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 009 08574 8 Koopman Hilda 2000 Prepositions postpositions circumpositions and particles In The Syntax of Specifiers and Heads pp 204 260 London Routledge Libert Alan R 2006 Ambipositions LINCOM studies in language typology No 13 LINCOM ISBN 3 89586 747 0 Maling Joan 1983 Transitive adjectives A case of categorial reanalysis In F Heny and B Richards eds Linguistic Categories Auxiliaries and Related Puzzles Vol 1 pp 253 289 Dordrecht Reidel Melis Ludo 2003 La preposition en francais Gap Ophrys Pullum Geoffrey K 2005 Phrasal Prepositions in a Civil Tone Language Log Accessed 9 September 2007 Quirk Randolph and Joan Mulholland 1964 Complex Prepositions and Related Sequences English Studies suppl to vol 45 pp 64 73 Rauh Gisa 1991 Approaches to Prepositions Tubingen Gunter Narr Reindl Donald F 2001 Areal Effects on the Preservation and Genesis of Slavic Postpositions In Lj Saric and D F Reindl On Prepositions Studia Slavica Oldenburgensia 8 pp 85 100 Oldenburg Carl von Ossietzky Universitat Oldenburg External links edit nbsp Look up adposition in Wiktionary the free dictionary Merriam Webster Editor s take on whether it is ok to end a sentence with a Preposition Some prepositions at Purdue Online Writing Lab Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Preposition and postposition amp oldid 1177679006, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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