in+juxtaposition
21juxtaposition — /jakstapazishan/ A placing or being placed in nearness or contiguity; or side by side; as a juxtaposition of words. Brown v. State, 126 Tex.Cr.R. 449, 72 S.W.2d 269, 270. In patent law, juxtaposition is the English equivalent of aggregation.… …
22JUXTAPOSITION — s. f. T. de Physique. Action des molécules qui se juxtaposent. Les cristaux qui se forment avec lenteur dans une dissolution tranquille, augmentent graduellement de volume par juxtaposition …
23JUXTAPOSITION — n. f. Action de juxtaposer ou Résultat de cette action. La juxtaposition de ces deux textes …
24Juxtaposition — Jụx|ta|po|si|ti|on 〈f. 20〉 1. 〈Min.〉 Anlagerung von, an der Oberfläche wachsenden, Kristallen 2. 〈Sprachw.〉 Zusammenrückung [<lat. iuxta „daneben“ + ponere „setzen, stellen, legen“] * * * Jux|ta|po|si|ti|on, die: 1. (Sprachwiss.) a)… …
25juxtaposition — Ex.: La mer, le port, la ville etaient calmes. On parle de juxtaposition lorsque deux groupes ou deux mots ayant la meme fonction sont situes cote a cote dans la phrase sans etre lies par une conjonction de coordination …
26juxtaposition — juxtapose ► VERB ▪ place close together. DERIVATIVES juxtaposition noun. ORIGIN French juxtaposer, from Latin juxta next + French poser to place …
27juxtaposition — noun 1. the act of positioning close together (or side by side) (Freq. 1) it is the result of the juxtaposition of contrasting colors • Syn: ↑apposition, ↑collocation • Derivationally related forms: ↑collocate (for …
28juxtaposition — noun Etymology: Latin juxta near + English position more at joust Date: 1654 the act or an instance of placing two or more things side by side; also the state of being so placed • juxtapositional adjective …
29juxtaposition — См. giustapposizione …
30juxtaposition — n. [L. juxta, near; positus, place] A placing or being placed side by side …