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noun(Ling.) Prädikat, das* * *['predikət](what is said about the subject of a sentence: We live in London; The president of the republic died.) die Satzaussage* * *predi·cateI. n[ˈpredɪkət, AM -kɪt]II. vt[ˈpredɪkeɪt]( form)1. (assert)▪ to \predicate that... behaupten, dass...* * *['predIkɪt]1. n (GRAM)Prädikat nt, Satzaussage f; (LOGIC) Aussage fpredicate noun — prädikatives Substantiv, Prädikativ(um) nt ['predIkeɪt]
2. vt(= imply, connote) aussagen; (= assert, state) behaupten;* * *A v/t [ˈpredıkeıt]1. behaupten, aussagen2. PHIL prädizieren, aussagen3. gründen, basieren ( beide:on, upon auf dat):B s [-kət]1. PHIL Prädikat n, Aussage f2. LING Prädikat n, Satzaussage fC adj [-kət]1. LING Prädikat(s)…, prädikativ:predicate adjective prädikatives Adjektiv;predicate logic Prädikatenlogik f* * *noun(Ling.) Prädikat, das* * *(grammar) n.Prädikat -e n. v.aussagen v. -
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1) ( assert)to \predicate that... behaupten, dass... -
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< edp> ■ Prädikat n -
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n AI Prädikat nt -
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predicate logic Prädikatenlogik fEnglish-German dictionary of Electrical Engineering and Electronics > predicate logic
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8 predicate calculus
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noun1) Klausel, die2) (Ling.) Teilsatz, der[subordinate] clause — Nebensatz, der
* * *[klo:z]1) (a part of a sentence having its own subject and predicate, eg either of the two parts of this sentence: The sentence `Mary has a friend who is rich' contains a main clause and a subordinate (relative) clause.) der Nebensatz2) (a paragraph in a contract, will, or act of parliament.) die Klausel* * *[klɔ:z, AM klɑ:z]I. nmain [or independent] /subordinate [or dependent] \clause Haupt-/Nebensatz m, übergeordneter/abhängiger Satzforfeit \clause Verfallsklausel f, Verwirkungsklausel fliability \clause Haftungsklausel fto amend a \clause in a contract eine Klausel in einem Vertrag abändernII. vi▪ to \clause sth ECON, FIN etw mit Wechselvermerken versehen* * *[klɔːz]n* * *clause [klɔːz] s2. JURa) Klausel f, Vorbehalt m, Bestimmung fb) Abschnitt m, Absatz m* * *noun1) Klausel, die2) (Ling.) Teilsatz, der[subordinate] clause — Nebensatz, der
* * *n.Klausel -n f.Satz ¨-e m. -
11 complement
1. noun1) (what completes) Vervollständigung, die2) (full number)3) (Ling.) Ergänzung, die2. transitive verb* * *['kompləmənt] 1. noun1) (in a sentence, the words of the predicate, not including the verb.) die Ergänzung2. verb(to complete, fill up.) ergänzen- academic.ru/14797/complementary">complementary* * *com·ple·ment[ˈkɒmplɪmənt, AM ˈkɑ:m-]I. vt▪ to \complement sth etw ergänzen [o abrunden]strawberries and cream \complement each other perfectly Erdbeeren und Sahne passen wunderbar zusammenII. n3. no pla full \complement of staff eine komplette Ersatzmannschaft* * *['kɒmplɪmənt]1. n1) (= addition) Ergänzung f (to +gen); (to perfect sth) Vervollkommnung f ( to +gen); (= colour) Komplementärfarbe f (to zu)the battalion didn't have its full complement of soldiers — das Bataillon hatte seine Sollstärke nicht
4) (MATH: angle) Ergänzungswinkel m2. vt['kɒmplɪment]to complement each other — sich ergänzen; (colours) aufeinander abgestimmt sein
3) (MATH) zu 90° ergänzen* * *A s [ˈkɒmpliımənt; US ˈkɑmplə-]1. a) Ergänzung f (to gen)b) Vervollkommnung f (to gen)2. Ergänzungsstück n3. obs Vollkommenheit f4. Vollständigkeit f, -zähligkeit fa) SCHIFF vollzählige Besatzung,b) MIL (volle) Stärke, Sollstärke f6. LING Ergänzung f7. MATH Komplementwinkel m8. MUS Ergänzung(sintervall) f(n)9. Serologie: Komplement n (Bestandteil des Blutserums, der die spezifische Wirkung eines Antikörpers ergänzt oder aktiviert)B v/t [-ment]a) ergänzenb) vervollkommnen, abrunden:* * *1. noun1) (what completes) Vervollständigung, diea [full] complement — die volle Zahl; (of people) die volle Stärke
3) (Ling.) Ergänzung, die2. transitive verb* * *n.Ergänzung f.Gegensatz m.Komplement n. v.ergänzen v. -
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См. также в других словарях:
Predicate — Pred i*cate, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Predicated}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Predicating}.] [L. praedicatus, p. p. of praedicare to cry in public, to proclaim. See {Preach}.] 1. To assert to belong to something; to affirm (one thing of another); as, to… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Predicate — or predication may refer to:*Predicate (mathematics), a relation, or the boolean valued characteristic function or indicator function of a relation *Predicate (logic), a fundamental concept in first order logic **in Bertrand Russell s theory of… … Wikipedia
predicate — [pred′i kāt΄; ] for n. [ & ] adj. [, pred′ikit] vt. predicated, predicating [L praedicatus, pp. of praedicare: see PREACH] 1. Obs. to proclaim; preach; declare; affirm 2. a) to affirm as a quality, attribute, or property of a person or thing … English World dictionary
predicate — pred·i·cate 1 / pre də ˌkāt/ vt cat·ed, cat·ing: to set or ground on something: find a basis for usu. used with on if Mary s claim is predicated simply on John s duty of support W. M. McGovern, Jr. et al. pred·i·cate 2 / pre di kət/ adj: rela … Law dictionary
Predicate — Pred i*cate, n. [L. praedicatum, neut. of praedicatus, p. p. praedicare: cf. F. pr[ e]dicat. See {Predicate}, v. t.] 1. (Logic) That which is affirmed or denied of the subject. In these propositions, Paper is white, Ink is not white, whiteness is … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
predicate — and predict are distantly related but their meanings are distinct. The primary meaning of predict is ‘to foretell’, whereas the primary use of predicate is followed by on in the meaning ‘to found or base (on a principle or assumption)’: That s a… … Modern English usage
predicate — ► NOUN 1) Grammar the part of a sentence or clause containing a verb and stating something about the subject (e.g. went home in John went home). 2) Logic something which is affirmed or denied concerning an argument of a proposition. ► VERB 1)… … English terms dictionary
Predicate — Pred i*cate, a. [L. praedicatus, p. p.] Predicated. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Predicate — Pred i*cate, v. i. To affirm something of another thing; to make an affirmation. Sir M. Hale. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
predicate — (n.) 1530s, a term in logic, from L. praedicatum that which is said of the subject, properly neut. pp. of praedicare assert, proclaim, declare publicly, from prae forth, before (see PRE (Cf. pre )) + dicare proclaim, from stem of dicere to speak … Etymology dictionary
predicate — vb affirm, declare, profess, *assert, aver, protest, avouch, avow, warrant … New Dictionary of Synonyms