0 past simple and past participle of juxtapose
1 to put things that are not similar next to each other:
The exhibition juxtaposes Picasso's early drawings with some of his later works.
Prepositional arguments of the head noun, for instance, are merely juxtaposed to it.
Its juxtaposed images encourage free-association on a subliminal plane - or drive you out of the theatre if you are bored out of your brain.
Text or images or maps, when incorporated in archaeological publication, do not work in isolation; they are juxtaposed.
Because the syntax in this section describes lexical syntax, all whitespace is expressed explicitly; there is no implicit space between juxtaposed symbols.
This suggests that normal cholesterol transfer in worm pairs is bi-directional and that it is facilitated by physical contact between juxtaposed membranes.
The children were ver y proud of their achievements, but their competences remain atomised, juxtaposed and without being connected to each other.
Juxtaposed with the above, and far outnumbering in frequency such references to the 'real world' outside, are endless stories of the miraculous events surrounding him.
The fold is cut by juxtaposed thrusts giving rise to the formation of three structurally higher basement-dominated thrust sheets.