Near, near to and nearby. What's the difference?

Solution 1:

Why isn't near, near to and nearby always interchangeable?

They can precede the noun. right

I follow the latest edition of the Shorter Oxford English Dictionary:

1)- near as an adjective: "the near[by] shop"

2)- near as an adverb: "he lives near", "the hour is near", "near dead"

3)- near as a preposition: "a house near the river"

in some contexts you can use near (to): "come near to me!" "*a house near/close to the station". US speakers prefer 'close to', and sometimes 'close to' sounds better anyway: e.g. "The situation is close to critical"

4)- 'nearby' is just an adverb. As a preposition it is dialectal, and a spelling variant of the adjectival phrase near by = 'close at hand'.

Those guidelines should solve most of your problems:

When they are adverbs they can follow the noun. wrong

  • The railway station is nearby [adverb]
  • The railway station is nearby my house. wrong
  • The railway station is near my house [preposition]
  • The railway station is near to my house [variant]

probably there is a typo, they never follow. If you are referring to station, remember that near is the predicate.

But we don't normally say:
?Meet me at the near railway station

(this is an adjective not an adverb)

The accepted version is:

Meet me at the railway station nearby (adverb)

Meet me at the nearby railway station (adjective)

Merriam-Webster also confirms that in the US nearby cannot be a preposition, therefore the examples in the other answer should be considered wrong, unless an explanation is provided.

  • He ran nearby a river.
  • She proceeded nearby him

These are prepositions and 'nearby' cannot be used as a preposition; 'alongside', 'near' is appropriate there. Besides this, the fact that the verb is in/transitive is not relevant: "she stood near" "she came near". What is fundamental is the distinction between 'adverb' and 'preposition'

For the case of whether "He ran near" is AmEng, I don't know. In terms of whether it is grammatical, I offer:

  1. near

    • can be used either transitively with a subject, or non-transitively without a subject:

    transitive: He ran near me.
    intransitive: He ran near.

This does not make sense. The verb is intransitive in both cases, in the first case the verb is intransitive and 'near' is a preposition. It is transitive here: "He ran a great race"

Solution 2:

I've been considering this for a while, now. Here's what my thoughts are:

Near

Near is a good option when you're considering geographical proximity of two stated locations. If you're literally saying "A is ___ B", it feels most natural to use "near" rather than "near to", "nearby to", or "nearby".

I feel "nearby" is often interchangeable with "near" in this case, but "nearby" does feel a bit more quaint, and it could mean "near and by" (i.e., nearby 3rd street).

Near to

Should be avoided in the "A is ___ B" pattern for the reason of ambiguity. "to" can literally mean "until you're right there" (i.e., within touching distance). So, if you say: "He walked near to the river." You could mean:

Figure (a):

a bloke walking alongside or "near" the river

(a) He walked near/'mostly alongside' the river. -or-


Figure (b):

a bloke walking near to another bloke to the river

(b) He walked near to [someone/something, especially the speaker] the river.


(a) is intuitive, but a University professor out of the English department might ding you for poor word choice if you form a habit of selecting ambiguous terms.

(b) would be more intuitive if the subject were plural: "They walked near to the river." (b) is apparent with a comma: "He walked near, to the river." But I've met a lot of opposition from other English instructors; that is, even in case (b), publishers in Japan prefer no comma for High School English.

Different authors have different grammatical styles, which are all equally acceptable. But this is the somewhat unfortunate model professionals usually go by:

  1. Most acceptable: a style people agree with and enjoy.
  2. Next-best: a style wherein the reader takes the author's meaning.

Nearby

When "near" comes at the end of a sentence, it takes on a different meaning. It may be associated with something abstract: "the end is near." There may be an omission of an idiomatic object: "I keep her near [to my heart]."

But "nearby" at the end of a sentence means "near" in the "A __ B" sense. "B" is always the current location. "The park is near us." = "The park is nearby."

"Nearby" is also the best choice of adjective: "He lives in a nearby house" because "nearby" is so strongly associated with the current location.

I believe "near by" in the "A __ B" means "near and by". The comma is omitted because it is obvious that they mean the same things. You could also write "near/by", "near-by", "nearby", or even "near--by". "He lives near, by the meadow." = "He lives nearby the meadow". I imagine people use "nearby" because there's no pause required to get the joint meaning across.

Solution 3:

You are looking at their usage tree upside-down.

You are thinking about a predicate and then attempting to discover each usage of nearness on that predicate.

To find their differences, you need to invert your box. You don't have to think outside the box, but simply invert the box.

Think about near/near to/nearby as separate words, each having its own right to its own branch of discovery, to discover what types of predicates each could be applied to.

All three are usable to denote proximity in location. These are the differences.

  1. near

    • can be used either transitively with a subject, or non-transitively without a subject: transitive: He ran near me.
      intransitive: He ran near.
    • can be used to describe proximity in likeness
      Her intellect is near his.
      The performance of an Intel i3 is nowhere near an Intel i7.
  2. near to

    • due to presence of preposition, can only be used transitively.
      He ran near to a river.
    • due to preposition to, can be used to indicate vector of nearness.
      He ran near to exhaustion.
      He ate near to a full stomach. (vs He ate near a full stomach)
      She became near to him. (unusable: she became near/nearby him)
      She proceeded near to him = she proceeded towards him, to be near him.
  3. nearby

    • can be used either transitively with a subject, or non-transitively without a subject.
      He ran nearby a river.
      He ran nearby.
      She proceeded nearby him = she proceeded towards an unspecified physical, intellectual or conceptual target, while being nearby him.
      The mark on the performance chart of an Intel i5 is nearby that of Intel i7.
    • cannot be used comprehensively to denote proximity in likeness
      unusable: Her intellect is nearby his.
      unusable: The performance of an Intel i3 is nowhere nearby an Intel i7.

I don't think I should rack my brain writing an exhaustive thesis (while my cat is scratching the door to have me let her in for the past half hour), my point is you need to invert your perspective, to define the differences.