Predicate

ahd-5
  • intransitive verb. To base or establish (a statement or action, for example).
  • intransitive verb. To state or affirm as an attribute or quality of something.
  • intransitive verb. To carry the connotation of; imply.
  • intransitive verb. To make (a term or expression) the predicate of a proposition.
  • intransitive verb. To proclaim or assert; declare.
  • intransitive verb. To make a statement or assertion.
  • noun. One of the two main constituents of a sentence or clause, modifying the subject and including the verb, objects, or phrases governed by the verb, as opened the door in Jane opened the door or is very sleepy in The child is very sleepy.
  • noun. That part of a proposition that is affirmed or denied about the subject. For example, in the proposition We are mortal, mortal is the predicate.
  • adjective. Of or belonging to the predicate of a sentence or clause.
  • adjective. Stated or asserted; predicated.
  • The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia
  • To declare; assert; affirm; specifically, to affirm as an attribute or quality of something; attribute as a property or characteristic.
  • To assert, as a proposition or argument, upon given grounds or data; found; hence, to base, as an action, upon certain grounds or security: as, to predicate a loan.
  • Predicated; belonging to a predicate; constituting a part of what is predicated or asserted of anything; made, through the instrumentality of a verb, to qualify its subject, or sometimes its direct object: thus, in the following sentences the italicized words are predicate: he is an invalid; he is ill; it made him ill; they elected him captain.
  • noun. That which is predicated or said of a subject in a proposition; in grammar, the word or words in a proposition which express what is affirmed or denied of the subject; that part of the sentence which is not the subject. See proposition.
  • noun. A class name; a title by which a person or thing may be known, in virtue of belonging to a class.
  • the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English
  • intransitive verb. To affirm something of another thing; to make an affirmation.
  • adjective. Predicated.
  • noun. That which is affirmed or denied of the subject. In these propositions, “Paper is white,” “Ink is not white,” whiteness is the predicate affirmed of paper and denied of ink.
  • noun. The word or words in a proposition which express what is affirmed of the subject.
  • transitive verb. To assert to belong to something; to affirm (one thing of another).
  • transitive verb. To found; to base.
  • Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
  • noun. The part of the sentence (or clause) which states something about the subject or the object of the sentence.
  • noun. A term of a statement, where the statement may be true or false depending on whether the thing referred to by the values of the statement's variables has the property signified by that (predicative) term.
  • noun. An operator or function that returns either true or false.
  • verb. To announce or assert publicly.
  • verb. To state, assert.
  • verb. To suppose, assume; to infer.
  • verb. To base (on); to assert on the grounds of.
  • WordNet 3.0 Copyright 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.
  • verb. involve as a necessary condition of consequence; as in logic
  • verb. make the (grammatical) predicate in a proposition
  • verb. affirm or declare as an attribute or quality of
  • noun. one of the two main constituents of a sentence; the predicate contains the verb and its complements
  • noun. (logic) what is predicated of the subject of a proposition; the second term in a proposition is predicated of the first term by means of the copula
  • Hypernym
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    Rhyme
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    Same Context
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    verb-form