predicate

predicate

englanti
  1. lausuttu, väitetty

  2. yhteys|k=en|kielitiede predikatiivinen

Liittyvät sanat: predicament

Synonyymisanakirja

predicate

lauseke, predikaatti, verbilauseke, termi, merkitä, tuoda tullessaan, implikoida, vakuuttaa, väittää, julistaa, pitää kiinni jstak, välittää.

Rimmaavat sanat

predicate rimmaa näiden kanssa:

aate, olympia-aate, osuustoiminta-aate, periaate, toimintaperiaate, yleisperiaate, määräämisperiaate, toimitusperiaate, julkisuusperiaate, kansallisuusperiaate...

Katso kaikki

Englannin sanakirja

predicate (englanti > suomi)

  1. predikaatti; predikaattiosa

  2. predikaatti

  3. predikaattifunktio

  4. ilmoittaa, vakuuttaa

  5. väittää

  6. olettaa

predicate englanniksi

  1. puhekieltä The part of the sentence (or clause) which states something about the subject or the object of the sentence.

  2. In "The dog barked very loudly", the subject is "the dog" and the predicate is "barked very loudly".

  3. (quote-book)

  4. In the light of this observation, consider Number Agreement in a sentence like:
    (120)      They seem to me S — to be fools/a fool
    Here, the Predicate Nominal fools agrees with the italicised NP they, in spite of the fact that (as we argued earlier) the two are contained in different Clauses at S-structure. How can this be? Under the NP MOVEMENT analysis of seem structures, sentences like (120) pose no problem; if we suppose that they originates in the — position as the subordinate Clause Subject, then we can say that the Predicate Nominal agrees with the underlying Subject of its Clause. How does they get from its underlying position as subordinate Clause Subject to its superficial position as main Clause Subject? By NP MOVEMENT, of course!
  5. puhekieltä 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.

  6. ''A nullary predicate is a proposition. Also, an instance of a predicate whose terms are all constant — e.g., P(2,3) — acts as a proposition.

    A predicate can be thought of as either a relation (between elements of the domain of discourse) or as a truth-valued function (of said elements).

    A predicate is either valid, satisfiable, or unsatisfiable.

    There are two ways of binding a predicates variables: one is to assign constant values to those variables, the other is to quantify over those variables (using universal or existential quantifiers). If all of a predicate's variables are bound, the resulting formula is a proposition.''

    Thus, in (121) (a) persuade is clearly a three-place Predicate — that is, a Predicate which takes three Arguments: the first of these Arguments is the Subject NP John, the second is the Primary Object NP Mary, and the third is the Secondary Object S-bar that she should resign. By contrast, believe in (121) (b) is clearly a two-place Predicate (i.e. a Predicate which has two Arguments): its first Argument is the Subject NP John, and its second Argument is the Object S-bar that Mary was innocent.
  7. puhekieltä An operator or function that returns either true or false.

  8. puhekieltä To proclaim, to announce or assert publicly.

  9. puhekieltä To state, assert as an attribute or quality of something.

  10. 1911, Encyclopedia Britannica, s:1911_Encyclopædia_Britannica/Conceptualism Conceptualism

  11. This quality becomes real as a mental concept when it is predicated of all the objects possessing it (“quod de pluribus natum est praedicari”).
  12. puhekieltä To suppose, assume; to infer.

  13. 1859, Charles Dickens, A Tale of Two Cities:

  14. There was a character about Madame Defarge, from which one might have predicated that she did not often make mistakes against herself in any of the reckonings over which she presided.
  15. 1881, Thomas Hardy, A Laodicean:

  16. Of anyone else it would have been said that she must be finding the afternoon rather dreary in the quaint halls not of her forefathers: but of Miss Power it was unsafe to predicate so surely.
  17. puhekieltä To base (on); to assert on the grounds of.

  18. 1978, Michel Foucault, The Will to Knowledge, trans. Robert Hurley (Penguin 1998, page 81):

  19. The law is what constitutes both desire and the lack on which it is predicated.
  20. To make a term (or expression) the Noun predicate of a statement.

  21. second-person plural present tense and imperative of predicare

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