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An appositive is a word or phrase renaming or amplifying something earlier in the sentence. The appositive can be a noun, a pronoun, or a noun phrase.

Example: My friend, Sue, went to the store.

Mr. Sir, a character in the book Holes, is an outlaw.

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11y ago
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13y ago

An appositive phrase starts off with a noun, then a comma, then the same noun stated differently, then another comma, then the rest of the sentence.

Example: Mitchell, my brother, loves to eat at McDonalds.

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10y ago

It is a grammatical construction in which a word, especially a noun phrase, is placed after another to modify its meaning. For example 'In London our first Prime Minister' - The phrase Prime Minister is on apposition to London

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Q: What are appositives?
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