You use the <E> to typify the method you are defining.
The most common example of generics is to have a typified class like this:
public class SomeClass<E> {
...
}
Then, when you are creating a new object of that class you define the type directly like this:
new SomeClass<String>();
That way any method in that class that refers to , will treat as a String, for that instance.
Now consider a static method (which is not bound to any particular instance of a class), in order to typify that method you have use another kind of typification which applies to methods, like this:
static <E> List<E> nCopies(int n, E value)
You use the <E> before the return type to say "this particular method will consider some E when it executes". What <E> will be is decided when you invoke the method:
nCopies(3, "a");
In this example <E> will be a String, so the return type will be a List<String>.
Finally, you can even mix them both:
public class SomeClass<E> {
public <F> void doSomething(E e, F f){
...
}
}
In this case, if you have an instance of SomeClass, the E in the doSomething method will always be String (for that instance), but the F can be anything you want it to be.