Prepositions
Prepositions (or more generally adpositions, see below) are a
grammatically distinct class of words whose most central members
characteristically express spatial or temporal relations (such as the English
words in, under, toward, before) or serve to mark
various syntactic functions and semantic roles (such as the English words of, for).
In that the primary function is
relational, preposition typically
combines with another constituent (called its complement) to form a prepositional
phrase, relating the
complement to the context in which the phrase occurs.
The word preposition comes from Latin, a language in which
such a word is usually placed before its complement. (Thus it is
pre-positioned.) English is another such language.
Similarly,circumpositions consist of two parts that appear on
both sides of the complement. The technical term used to refer collectively to
prepositions, postpositions, and circumpositions is adposition. Some linguists use
the word "preposition" instead of "adposition" for all
three cases.
Some examples of English prepositions
(marked as bold) as used
in phrases are:
a. the {weather} in May
b. {cheese} from France with live bacteria
a. {sleep} throughout the winter
b. {danced} atop the tables for hours
a. {happy} for them
b. {sick} until recently
Adpositions perform many of the same
functions as case markings, but adpositions are syntactic
elements, while case markings aremorphological elements.
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