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predicate on

 - 4 dictionary results

pred⋅i⋅cate

[v. pred-i-keyt; adj., n. pred-i-kit] verb, -cat⋅ed, -cat⋅ing, adjective, noun
–verb (used with object)
1. to proclaim; declare; affirm; assert.
2. Logic.
a. to affirm or assert (something) of the subject of a proposition.
b. to make (a term) the predicate of such a proposition.
3. to connote; imply: His retraction predicates a change of attitude.
4. to found or derive (a statement, action, etc.); base (usually fol. by on): He predicated his behavior on his faith in humanity.
–verb (used without object)
5. to make an affirmation or assertion.
–adjective
6. predicated.
7. Grammar. belonging to the predicate: a predicate noun.
–noun
8. Grammar. (in many languages, as English) 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.
9. Logic. that which is affirmed or denied concerning the subject of a proposition.

Origin:
1400–50; (n.) late ME (< MF predicat) < ML praedicātum, n. use of neut. of L praedicātus, ptp. of praedicāre to declare publicly, assert, equiv. to prae- pre- + dicā(re) to show, indicate, make known + -tus ptp. suffix; (v. and adj.) < L praedicātus; cf. preach


pred⋅i⋅ca⋅tion, noun
pred⋅i⋅ca⋅tion⋅al, adjective
pred⋅i⋅ca⋅tive [pred-i-key-tiv, -kuh-; Brit. pri-dik-uh-tiv] , adjective
pred⋅i⋅ca⋅tive⋅ly, adverb
Dictionary.com Unabridged
Based on the Random House Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2009.
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Cultural Dictionary

predicate [(pred-i-kuht)]

The part of a sentence that shows what is being said about the subject. The predicate includes the main verb and all its modifiers. In the following sentence, the italicized portion is the predicate: “Olga's dog was the ugliest creature on four legs.”

The American Heritage® New Dictionary of Cultural Literacy, Third Edition
Copyright © 2005 by Houghton Mifflin Company.
Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.
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Word Origin & History

predicate  (n.)
1532, a term in logic, from L. prædicatum "that which is said of the subject," prop. neut. pp. of prædicare "assert, proclaim, declare publicly," from præ- "forth, before" + dicare "proclaim," from stem of dicere "to speak, to say" (see diction). Grammatical sense is from 1638. Phrase predicated on "founded on, based on," is Amer.Eng., first recorded 1766.
Online Etymology Dictionary, © 2001 Douglas Harper
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Legal Dictionary

Main Entry: pred·i·cate
Pronunciation: 'pre-di-k&t
Function: adjective
: relating to or being any of a series of criminal acts upon which prosecution for racketeering may be predicated predicate act> predicate crime>
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