pon-, posit-, pos-, -poning, -poned, -ponency, -ponent, -ponement, -pound
(Latin: to place, to put, to set; placement, positioning)
2. That which is generally considered or believed to be correct, but which is not necessarily accurate: "College and university students have had a supposed confidence that it would be easy to find a good job just before or reasonably soon after they have graduated."
"Too many military officials have lived with the supposition that the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq could be won; however, their suppositions have resulted in more deaths of civilians and military personnel than anyone could have anticipated and victory is no longer considered a possibility."
"The police only had suppositional knowledge as to who was responsible for the murder."
2. A substitution for the real thing; not genuine: "She was a more supposititious candidate for congress than her political backers had anticipated."
2. Easily melted medicated objects that are in cone-shaped or spindle-shaped (for insertion into the rectum), globular or egg-shaped (for use in the vagina), and pencil-shaped (for insertion into the urethra) and which contain drugs and water-dissolvable medical solutions: "Such suppositories are especially useful in babies, in uncooperative patients, and in patients who easily vomit or who have certain digestive disorders."
3. Etymology: from Medieval Latin suppositorium and Late Latin suppositorius, "placed underneath or up"; from Latin suppositus, past participle of supponere, "to put" or "to place under".
"When the author wrote about two of the characters in her novel, the editor noticed that every once in awhile, the writer was mistakenly transposing their names."
2. To move to a different place or context: "The teacher pointed out that the student had misspelled "strenght" on his paper; so, she suggested that he correct it by transposing the last two letters to make the spelling correct."3. To write or to perform a musical composition in a key other than the original or given key: "Certain singers were transposing their songs down an octave and others were transposing up an octave higher than the original musical composition indicated."
2. The placing of something in a different setting, or the recasting of something in a different language, style, or medium: "It is said that the Chinese dragon is a transposition of the serpent."
3. The rewriting or playing of a piece of music in a key or at a pitch other than the original or usual key or pitch: "The orchestra played various transpositions that had been changed from their original compositions."
4. In mathematics, the changing of the order of a set of things or arranging in different orders: "The transpositions of a, b, and c are abc, acb, bac, bca, cab, and cba."
"By subtracting 2 from both sides of the equation 2 + x = 4, a person can have a transposition that moves 2 to the other side, resulting in x = 4 - 2, which makes x equal 2."
5. A transfer of a DNA segment to a new position on the same or another chromosome: "The transposition of a gene or set of genes goes from one DNA position to another position.""In the "Wicked Bible", that was published as a version of the King James Bible in 1631, there was a transpositional blank, or deletion, in place of the word not. The result of this transposition resulted in the commandment saying "Thou shalt commit adultery" instead of "Thou shalt not commit adultery."
"In other organisms, transposons can become a permanent and even beneficial part of the genome, as in maize (corn), where transposons account for half of the genome, and certain bacteria, where genes for antibiotic resistance can spread by means of transposons."
"Another explanation states that a transposon is a segment of DNA that is capable of inserting copies of itself into other DNA sections within the same cell."
Related word families intertwined with "to place, placing, to put; to add; to stay; to attach" word units: fix-; prosth-; stato-; the-, thes-.
