English edit

Etymology edit

From Latin praepositiō (a setting before, a preposition), a calque of Ancient Greek πρόθεσις (próthesis, a setting before, preposition (grammar)) +‎ -al.

Adjective edit

prepositional (not comparable)

  1. Of, pertaining to, or of the nature of a preposition.
    • 1988, Andrew Radford, chapter 7, in Transformational grammar: a first course, Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, page 364:
          Although we have concentrated on Prepositions which take zero Complements, NP Complements, or clausal Complements in our discussion above, there seems no reason in principle to exclude the possibility of Prepositions taking prepositional Complements. And it may well be that items such as those italicised below are Prepositions which subcategorise a PP Complement headed by of:
      (80) (a)      He stayed at home because [of the strike]
      (80) (b)      He fell out [of the window]
      (80) (c)      Few people outside [of the immediate family] know
      (80) (d)   %It fell off [of the table] (dialectal)
  2. (grammar) Of the prepositional case.

Derived terms edit

Translations edit

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Noun edit

prepositional (plural prepositionals)

  1. (grammar) The prepositional case.

Translations edit