Units 5 6
Units 5 6
Units 5 6
SEMANTICS
Ms. Nehal Al-Saleh
2
Unit 5: Predicates
• The predicator of a simple declarative sentence is the word (sometimes a
group of words) which does not belong to any of the referring expressions
and which, of the remainder, makes the most specific contribution to the
meaning of the sentence.
• Predicators can be of different parts of speech, and despite their syntactic
differences they all function the same way semantically. However,
conjunctions and articles can never be predicators.
• In a simple declarative sentence, there are two basic semantic roles:
predicator and argument.
▫ Sara ate the apple
Unit 5: Predicates
• The semantic analysis of a sentence into predicator and arguments does not
always correspond to the traditional grammatical analysis of predicate and
subject.
• Predicate and predicator are terms of different sorts. Predicate identifies
elements in the language system regardless of a certain sentence, but
predicator identifies the semantic role played by a word or group of words
in a specific given sample sentence.
• The degree of a predicate is a number indicating the number of arguments
it is normally understood to have in simple sentences.
• There are predicates of one degree (one-place predicate) of two degrees
(two-place predicate) and predicates of three degrees (three-place
predicate)
4
Unit 5: Predicates
• The majority of adjectives are one-place predicates.
• Prepositions are two-degree predicates.
• Most nouns are one-place predicates
• In English, the verb 'be' may either be used as an identity predicate or
simply just a grammatical device to link the predicate (that is not a verb) to
its first argument. It could also be used as a device to carry tense.
• The verb ‘be’ functions as an identity predicate in equative sentences.
▫ That man is my father (‘is’ functions as an identity predicate)
▫ The book is red ( ‘is’ does not function semantically, but grammaticaly)
5