predicate

ودیئ
definition
verb
a word that predicates something about its subject
state, affirm, or assert (something) about the subject of a sentence or an argument of proposition.
the theory of structure on which later chemistry was predicated
found or base something on.
noun
predicate adjective
the part of a sentence or clause containing a verb and stating something about the subject (e.g., went home in John went home ).
example
In stating that the entity possesses the attribute, we use a 'predicate' with a single argument.
The theory that existence is not a 'predicate' implies, however, that all existential propositions are synthetic.
This is the subject, and the 'predicate' has the form is noun phrase.
For example, a descriptive word before a noun is an adjective; if it follows the noun it becomes a 'predicate' .
Please remember to answer in complete subject / 'predicate' sentences to demonstrate your communicative skills.
Both Kant and Russell for example are interested in the logical issue of whether existence is a 'predicate' .
In ‘On Interpretation’ Aristotle argues that a single assertion must always either affirm or deny a single 'predicate' of a single subject.
'predicate' adjective
One just can't help feeling, however, that the entire base he has 'predicated' his argument on is flawed.
It is true that purely mathematical discourse has no use for tensed 'predications' , but reference to numbers can occur in other kinds of discourse than the purely mathematical.
According to this refined view, a 'predication' is made not by combining two ideas or presentations, but by combining two judgements.
Consider, for example, the scope of the authority Mary believes the love-charm affords her and what, in the end, that authority 'is predicated upon' .
Anything we please can be made to serve as a logical predicate; the subject can even be 'predicated' of itself; for logic abstracts from all content.
Last time, on our first grammar day, we learned about subjects and 'predicates' .
It must simply be that the quantity may be truly 'predicated' of the object.
Among 'predications' , Aristotle distinguished between essential and accidental, with ‘Socrates is a man’ being an example of the first and ‘Socrates is pale’ an example of the second.
As I mentioned, the basic propositions are 'predicates' applied to single individuals.
You don't need to worry about sentences with 'predicates' and subjects.
All such propositions must involve reference to some individual and 'predicating' some property of that individual.
What can be predicated of a kind differs absolutely from what can be 'predicated' of an individual.
So Scotus claims that pure perfection can be 'predicated' of God.
Second, social movements 'are predicated on' , and derive their legitimacy from, mass mobilization and popular support.
Phillips's syntax does the same thing, deferring 'predication' so that we will be drawn to the end of the poem.
By dropping subjects, 'predicates' , and/or prepositions, Sosnora often reduces sentences to fragments or even to phrases.
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