Predicate - meaning and definition. What is Predicate
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What (who) is Predicate - definition

WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION
Predication; Predicates; Predicated; Predicating; Predicate (disambiguation); Predications

predicate         
v. a.
Assert, maintain, aver, declare, say.
predicate         
¦ noun 'pr?d?k?t
1. Grammar the part of a sentence or clause containing a verb and stating something about the subject (e.g. went home in John went home).
2. Logic something which is affirmed or denied concerning an argument of a proposition.
¦ verb 'pr?d?ke?t
1. Grammar & Logic state, affirm, or assert (something) about the subject of a sentence or an argument of a proposition.
declare or assert as true or existing.
2. (predicate something on/upon) found or base something on.
Derivatives
predication noun
Origin
ME: from L. praedicatum 'something declared', neut. of praedicatus, from praedicare, from prae 'beforehand' + dicare 'make known'.
predicate         
(predicated)
1.
In some systems of grammar, the predicate of a clause is the part of it that is not the subject. For example, in 'I decided what to do', 'decided what to do' is the predicate.
N-COUNT
2.
If you say that one situation is predicated on another, you mean that the first situation can be true or real only if the second one is true or real. (FORMAL)
Financial success is usually predicated on having money or being able to obtain it.
VERB: usu passive, be V-ed on n/-ing

Wikipedia

Predicate

Predicate or predication may refer to:

  • Predicate (grammar), in linguistics
  • Predication (philosophy)
  • several closely related uses in mathematics and formal logic:
    • Predicate (mathematical logic)
    • Propositional function
    • Finitary relation, or n-ary predicate
    • Boolean-valued function
    • Syntactic predicate, in formal grammars and parsers
    • Functional predicate
  • Predication (computer architecture)
  • in United States law, the basis or foundation of something
    • Predicate crime
    • Predicate rules, in the U.S. Title 21 CFR Part 11
  • Predicate, a term used in some European context for either nobles' honorifics or for nobiliary particles
Examples of use of Predicate
1. But it was meant to be a predicate for complementary levels of achievement by Iraqis.
2. Thoughts of a Predicate Felon by Tony Yayo is out on September 5 on Interscope.
3. But I‘m not certain I would agree with the predicate of the question.
4. In a single sentence, the subject might be in Arabic, the verb in French, the predicate in Berber or Turkish.
5. "McCain is doing this without having laid any predicate for the idea that his participation is crucial to the process," said pollster Geoff Garin.