Apedia

Ponere Meaning Verb Put Prefix Place Merchants Apposite

Front apposite \AP-uh-zit\
Back adjective
Very applicable or apt.

["Apposite" and "opposite" sound so much alike that you would expect them to have a common ancestor -- and they do. It is the Latin verb "ponere," which means "to put or place." Adding the prefix "ad-" to "ponere" created "apponere," meaning "to place near" or "to apply to," and that branch of the "ponere" family tree led to "apposite." The word is used to describe something that applies well to or is very appropriate for something else, a notion perhaps suggested by the close proximity of two objects. To get "opposite," the prefix "ob-" was added to "ponere" to create "opponere," meaning "to place against or opposite." The related verb "componere," meaning "to put together," gave us "compound" and "composite."]

"The Venetian merchants who travelled to other lands or cities were especially useful; it is apposite, too, that in a mercantile state, the language of merchants was used as a code." -- From Peter Ackroyd's 2010 book Venice: Pure City

Tags: priorityhigh

Learn with these flashcards. Click next, previous, or up to navigate to more flashcards for this subject.

Next card: Means propinquity proximity root proximus propinquus english sense

Previous card: Spoonerism spoo-nuh-riz-uhm noun transposition initial sounds pair words

Up to card list: Hard English Vocabulary