Contributor: Allison Crews. Lesson ID: 13600
Appositives are a way to add extra description and meaning to your sentences. Learn what they are and how to use them in this lesson!
George Washington, the first president of the United States, lived at Mt. Vernon.
Read on to find out!
An appositive phrase is a noun, noun phrase, or series of nouns that appears immediately before or after a different noun for the purpose of renaming or describing that noun in a different way.
Consider the whole sentence once more:
George Washington, the first president of the United States, lived at Mt. Vernon.
If the appositive is removed, the sentence becomes:
George Washington lived at Mt. Vernon.
The function of the appositive in this example is to identify what George Washington is known for. The first president of the United States is a noun phrase that renames the subject, George Washington, in a different way.
Appositives are sometimes interchangeable, meaning that it doesn't matter which noun phrase is the subject and which is the appositive.
The noun phrases in this sentence are logically interchangeable.
George Washington became the appositive because it became the modifier. The first president of the United States became the noun phrase being renamed.
It works because both noun phrases are ways of naming the same person.
Now that you understand the basics of appositives, head over to the Got It? section to learn about restrictive and nonrestrictive appositives.