Prepositional arguments of the head noun, for instance, are merely juxtaposed to it. From the Cambridge English Corpus

Judgments must return to intent, context, and comprehension: how the artist intended the work, how she juxtaposes materials, and how the consumer 'reads' the result. From the Cambridge English Corpus

This point is reinforced by juxtaposing the correspondent's depiction of domestic interiors with those of public spaces in his reports. From the Cambridge English Corpus

While this is controversal, many linguists tend to use it informally, nonetheless, and then juxtapose their intuited results with dates derived from archaeology. From the Cambridge English Corpus

With care and sensitivity he manages to juxtapose, place and transform his field recordings without contrivance. From the Cambridge English Corpus

Text or images or maps, when incorporated in archaeological publication, do not work in isolation; they are juxtaposed. From the Cambridge English Corpus

The text works by effectively juxtaposing a series of debates, authors, etc. but it can then come across as sprawling rather than coherent. From the Cambridge English Corpus

Traditional forms of text - narratives - are dissolved into isolated fragments that can then be juxtaposed in a pastiche. From the Cambridge English Corpus

In juxtaposing ideological content to linguistic form, this alternative hypothesis fails to take into account the embeddedness of content in form. From the Cambridge English Corpus

Such narrow definitions often juxtapose 'law in action' with the 'law in the books'. From the Cambridge English Corpus

A computerised real-time performance is fundamentally different from the classical experiences of juxtaposing instruments and tape. From the Cambridge English Corpus

But much more profoundly, the chapter juxtaposes the family and community relationships of the working and middle class. From the Cambridge English Corpus