例句 |
juxtaposedadjective having a border in commonthe juxtaposed photographs of the country's richest and poorest areas are a telling commentary on inequality abutting, adjacent, adjoining, bordering, conterminous, contiguous, flanking, flush, fringing, joining, neighboring, skirting, touching, verging approximate, close, closest, immediate, near, nearby, nearest, next-door, nighattached, communicating, connected, connecting, interconnecting, joined, linked, unitedbounding, circumjacent, embracing, encircling, enclosing(also inclosing), fencing, rimming, surroundingmarginal, peripheral, tangent, tangentialambient, encompassing nonadjacent, noncontiguous apart, detached, disconnected, discrete, free-standing, isolate, isolated, removed, separate, single, unattached, unconnected, unlinkedaway, distant, far, faraway, far-off, farthest, remotediscontinuous, noncontinuousbroken up, disjoined, dissevered, dissociated, disunited, divided, divorced, parted, ramified, resolved, severed, split, sundered, uncoupled, unyoked juxtaposedverbpast tense of juxtaposeformalto place (different things) together in order to create an interesting effect or to show how they are the same or differentThe new museum display juxtaposes modern art with classical art. alternatedinterlaced, interspersed, interwove(also interweaved), laced, salted, threaded, wove(or weaved), wreathedinserted, intermingled, mingled, mixedamalgamated, assimilated, blended(also blent), combined, commingled, embodied, fused, incorporated, integrated, merged adj.adjacent, adjoining, contiguous, juxtaposed mean being in close proximity.adjacent may or may not imply contact but always implies absence of anything of the same kind in between.a house with an adjacent garage adjoining definitely implies meeting and touching at some point or line.had adjoining rooms at the hotel contiguous implies having contact on all or most of one side.offices in all 48 contiguous states juxtaposed means placed side by side especially so as to permit comparison and contrast.a skyscraper juxtaposed to a church in 1862 |