[Grammar] "Opposite of something" or "opposite something"

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fruitfly

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Hello. I have a question about grammar.
When do you use "Opposite of something" or "opposite something"?
I cannot think of an example for each one at the moment, but I remember reading a sentence in a textbook that said "something is opposite something".
I've always used "opposite of something", so I'm not sure why/when the latter one is used.
 

Tdol

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White is the opposite of black.
My house is opposite the post office. (= directly in front on the other side of the road)
 

fruitfly

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Thank you for your fast reply. So is "opposite something" used for pointing out location? And is "opposite of something" used when there are two opposing concepts?
 

GoesStation

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So is "opposite something" used for pointing out location? And is "the opposite of something" used when there are two opposing concepts?
Yes, that's it, with my addition.
 

andrewg927

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There may be something other than location where you can say "opposite something". I can't think of one right now but you should keep an open eye on it.
 

Tdol

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You can use it in something like opposite counterpart, which is not physically a location.
 
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