postposition
Etymology
post- + position
noun
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(grammar) A word that has the same purpose as a preposition but comes after the noun. -
The act of placing after, or the state of being placed after. the postposition of the nominative case to the verb 1643, Joseph Mede, Daniel's Weeks
verb
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(grammar) To be placed after a the word that it modifies. Nonetheless, PPs in my dataset not only make up the bulk of the non-clausal postpositionings, but they are also postpositioned at a relatively high rate, particularly in comparison to adverbs, the second most frequent form. 2020, Shannon Dubenion-Smith, “A typology of non-clausal postpositioning in German dialects”, in Janet Zhiqun Xing, editor, A Typological Approach to Grammaticalization and Lexicalization: East Meets West (Trends in Linguistics; 327), Berlin: De Gruyter Mouton, →DOI, page 245
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