predicating

Variant of predicate

predicate definition

predi·cate (predi kāt′; for n. & adj., -kit)

transitive verb predicated -·cat′ed, predicating -·cat′·ing

  1. Obsolete to proclaim; preach; declare; affirm
    1. to affirm as a quality, attribute, or property of a person or thing to predicate the honesty of another's motives
    2. Logic to assert (something) about the subject of a proposition
  2. to affirm or base (something) on or upon given facts, arguments, conditions, etc.
  3. to imply or connote

Etymology: L praedicatus, pp. of praedicare: see preach

intransitive verb

to make an affirmation or statement

noun

  1. Gram. the verb or verbal phrase, including any complements, objects, and modifiers, that is one of the two immediate constituents of a sentence and asserts something about the subject
  2. Logic something that is affirmed or denied about the subject of a proposition (Ex.: green in “grass is green”)

Etymology: ML praedicatum, neut. of praedicatus: see predicatethe

adjective

Gram. of or having the nature of a predicate a predicate adjective

Related Forms:

Webster's New World College Dictionary Copyright © 2009 by Wiley Publishing, Inc., Cleveland, Ohio.
Used by arrangement with John Wiley & Sons, Inc.

Comments
Improve this definition.
Do you have more to add? Share your linguistic knowledge or observation.
/Register to save your comments.