0 present 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.
This point is reinforced by juxtaposing the correspondent's depiction of domestic interiors with those of public spaces in his reports.
The text works by effectively juxtaposing a series of debates, authors, etc. but it can then come across as sprawling rather than coherent.
In juxtaposing ideological content to linguistic form, this alternative hypothesis fails to take into account the embeddedness of content in form.
A computerised real-time performance is fundamentally different from the classical experiences of juxtaposing instruments and tape.
It offers no real surprises, but the chosen form of juxtaposing each politician's version of a certain episode is very rewarding.
The experience of juxtaposing ' ' local operations ' ' with other cultural relations is peculiar to diasporic self-consciousness.
The film works best by juxtaposing performance and omission.
Therefore, considerable analytical caution is necessary when juxtaposing narrative and practice, as a way of measuring what people may or may not believe in.