predicate

(noun)

The part of the sentence (or clause) that states something about the subject or the object of the sentence.

Related Terms

  • complements,
  • object
  • simple predicate
  • sentence fragment
  • subject
  • fragment
  • phrase
  • complement
  • clause
  • Object
  • Complement
  • Clause
  • Phrase
  • modifier

Examples of predicate in the following topics:

  • Subject and Predicate

  • Predicate Nouns

  • Components of a Sentence

    • The action is the predicate, and the person (or thing) doing it is the subject.
    • The predicate explains the action of the sentence.
    • There are more complex definitions of "predicate."
    • Sometimes "predicate" can simply mean "everything except the subject."
    • Compound predicate: He ran to the house and knocked on the door.
  • Introduction to Provisioning

    • Max Weber (The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism, 1904-05) and Robert Tawney (Religion and the Rise of Capitalism, 1926) both hypothesize that the rise of the capitalist system was predicated on protestant beliefs.
  • Vending Machines

    • The success of such machines is predicated on the assumption that the customer will be honest (hence the nickname "honor box"), and need only one copy.
  • Understanding Social Interaction

    • The United States Congress is an example of a social institution that is clearly predicated upon social interactions.
  • Unclassified and Uncultured Bacteria

    • While there are several molecular tools that allow us to classify or distinguish different bacterial species, this is predicated on obtaining uni-species cultures of a given bacteria.
  • Adjectives

    • They are most frequently used as a modifier placed right after a noun or as a predicate to a verb.
  • Employee Transfers

    • It is predicated on the original department's ability to absorb the loss of that employee as well as the level of need in the new department.
  • Properties of Indifference Curves

    • The concept of an indifference curve is predicated on the idea that a given consumer has rational preferences in regard to the purchase of groupings of goods, with a series of key properties that define the process of mapping these curves:
Subjects
  • Accounting
  • Algebra
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  • Economics
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  • Microbiology
  • Physics
  • Physiology
  • Political Science
  • Psychology
  • Sociology
  • Statistics
  • U.S. History
  • World History
  • Writing

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