Definition of Predication

1. Noun. (logic) a declaration of something self-evident; something that can be assumed as the basis for argument.

Exact synonyms: Postulation
Category relationships: Logic
Generic synonyms: Declaration
Derivative terms: Postulate, Predicate, Predicate

Definition of Predication

1. n. The act of predicating, or of affirming one thing of another; affirmation; assertion.

Definition of Predication

1. Noun. A proclamation, announcement or preaching ¹

2. Noun. An assertion or affirmation ¹

3. Noun. (logic) A self-evident postulate ¹

4. Noun. (computing) The parallel execution of all possible outcomes of a branch instruction, all except one of which are discarded after the branch condition has been evaluated ¹

¹ Source: wiktionary.com

Definition of Predication

1. [n -S]

Lexicographical Neighbors of Predication

predicable
predicables
predicably
predicament
predicamental
predicaments
predicand
predicant
predicants
predicate
predicate calculus
predicate logic
predicated
predicates
predicating
predication
predications
predicative
predicative adjective
predicative adjectives
predicative case
predicative cases
predicatively
predicatives
predicator
predicators
predicatory
predicrotic
predict
predictabilities

Literary usage of Predication

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. A Treatise on Universal Algebra: With Applications by Alfred North Whitehead (1898)
"For a primitive predication is essentially a singular act having relation to a ... Hence if x stand for a proposition which is a primitive predication, ..."

2. Thought and Things: A Study of the Development and Meaning of Thought, Or by James Mark Baldwin (1908)
"THE "WHAT" AND "WHY" OF Predication i. Having now discussed broadly the rise of that form of meaning to which the word predication is applied, ..."

3. Toda Grammar and Texts by Murray Barnson Emeneau (1984)
"The syntactic outline presents: (1) the predication types as they are made up of items ... The chief predication base, with its parts ordered as they occur, ..."

4. Composition for College Students by Joseph Morris Thomas, Frederick Alexander Manchester, Frank William Scott (1922)
"To be complete a sentence must contain, explicitly or implicitly, at least one .independent predication.1 An understanding of this statement requires an ..."

5. Toda Grammar and Texts by Murray Barnson Emeneau (1984)
"The construction denotes the purpose of the main predication. The translation is: 'in order to do, in order that, so that, for (someone) to, to'. ..."

6. A Grammar of the German Language: Designed for a Thoro and Practical Study by George Oliver Curme (1922)
"A verb of incomplete predication in connection with a predicate complement, the verb assuming in a mere formal way the function of predication, ..."

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