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at liberty predicate

 

Definitions from the Web

Term: At Liberty Predicate

Definition:

The term "at liberty predicate" is a linguistic term used in formal logic to indicate that a sentence asserts a property or attribute about an individual or object. It refers to the part of a proposition that makes a statement about the subject.

Sample sentences:

  1. John is tall. In this sentence, the phrase "is tall" serves as the at liberty predicate as it describes the attribute of being tall that is being asserted about John.
  2. The cat is sleeping. Here, the at liberty predicate is "is sleeping" since it signifies the action or state being attributed to the cat.
  3. She seems happy. In this case, "seems happy" acts as the at liberty predicate indicating the perceived emotional state of "she".

Related Products:

at large postnominal at large predicate at last at least at leisure at leisure predicate at length at liberty at liberty predicate at loggerheads at long last at mean at most at my discretion at october at odds at odds predicate

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