X-Nico

2 unusual facts about predicate


Predicate

Syntactic predicate (in parser technology) guidelines the parser process

Branch predication (computer programming), a choice to execute or not to execute a given instruction based on the content of a machine register


Compound modifier

Attributive compounds – modifiers within the noun phrase – are typically hyphenated, whereas the same compounds used as predicates will typically not be (if they are temporary compounds), unless they are permanent compounds attested as dictionary headwords.

Functional theories of grammar

#Pragmatic functions: (Theme and Rheme, Topic and Focus) Predicate), defining the informational status of constituents, determined by the pragmatic context of the verbal interaction.

Logico-linguistic modeling

Formulae in predicate logic translate easily into the Prolog artificial intelligence language.

Nádasdy family

The buyer and his three sons, Vencel/Venceslav, Raszló/Vraslav and László/Ladislav, now partially used the predicate of Pethenegh.

Ordinary language

By contrast, when Bertrand Russell writes, in The Principles of Mathematics, "A class ... is neither a predicate nor a class-concept, for different predicates and different class-concepts may correspond to the same class." Russell uses the word class in a sense that might or might not correspond neatly to any identifiable ordinary English use of the word; so we might say that he is not using ordinary language, but jargon.

Pucić noble family

The Emperor Leopold I, granted the title of Count and the predicate Di Zagorie on 20 September 1688 to Mateo Pucić, son of Lucijan Pucić and Marija Bunić.

Skee-Lo

Skee-Lo also recorded a cover of the Schoolhouse Rock! song "The Tale of Mr. Morton", which taught sentence structure (subject, verb and predicate).

Structure mapping engine

If the predicate can take any number of arguments, N-ary is false.


see also