predicate / verb ˈprɛd ɪˌkeɪt; adjective, noun ˈprɛd ɪ kɪt /

💦中学词汇谓语语词谓词语义

predicate4 个定义

v. 有主动词 verb

pred·i·cat·ed, pred·i·cat·ing.

  1. to proclaim; declare; affirm; assert.
  2. Logic. to affirm or assert of the subject of a proposition.to make the predicate of such a proposition.
  3. to connote; imply: His retraction predicates a change of attitude.
  4. to found or derive; base: He predicated his behavior on his faith in humanity.
v. 无主动词 verb

pred·i·cat·ed, pred·i·cat·ing.

  1. to make an affirmation or assertion.
adj. 形容词 adjective
  1. predicated.
  2. Grammar. belonging to the predicate: a predicate noun.
n. 名词 noun
  1. Grammar. a syntactic unit that functions as one of the two main constituents of a simple sentence, the other being the subject, and that consists of a verb, which in English may agree with the subject in number, and of all the words governed by the verb or modifying it, the whole often expressing the action performed by or the state attributed to the subject, as is here in Larry is here.
  2. Logic. that which is affirmed or denied concerning the subject of a proposition.

predicate 近义词

v. 动词 verb

assert

predicate 的近义词 6
predicate 的反义词 1
v. 动词 verb

imply

predicate 的近义词 9
predicate 的反义词 3

更多predicate例句

  1. Some of that will be predicated on how well its international business does give that it accounted for 15% of its second-quarter revenues despite making up almost 75% of the user base.
  2. Globalization—the ideal of an interconnected world—is predicated on the idea that we are stronger working together than split apart.
  3. However, the busybody’s actions and activities are predicated not on what is visible but by what they imagine they are seeing, and this is where it gets dicey.
  4. The rules governing the trust layer display are predicated on a very shallow “job category” to “job type” to a keyword-based ontology.
  5. Overnight, multinational law firms closed their offices, and businesses predicated on collaboration and “face time” moved their faces to video-conferencing software.
  6. FRIEDMAN: I think you also laid the predicate for the Iran negotiations.
  7. His 2004 Democratic Convention address propelled him into the national spotlight, laying the presidential predicate.
  8. The major term is usually the predicate of the major premise and the predicate of the conclusion.
  9. An argument that uses as a premise such a cause may predicate its effect as a conclusion with absolute certainty.
  10. Forcing the subject toward the position usually occupied by the predicate emphasizes the subject.
  11. Unity therefore dwells within us, and it is in us without the object of which we predicate that it is some one thing.
  12. To predicate it of activity, would be to make it depend on things alien to virtue and the soul.