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predicator
[ pred-i-key-ter ]
noun
Grammar.
- the verbal element of a clause or sentence.
predicator
/ ˈɛɪˌɪə /
noun
- (in systemic grammar) the part of a sentence or clause containing the verbal group; one of the four or five major components into which clauses can be divided, the others being subject, object, adjunct, and (in some versions of the grammar) complement
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51Թ History and Origins
Origin of predicator1
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Example Sentences
Examples have not been reviewed.
While the ADP National Employment report showed private payrolls growth falling below 100,000 in September, the report has not been a reliable predicator of the private payrolls component in the Labor Department's employment report.
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All previous efforts to turn violent authoritarians into national heroes for the right have largely failed, and past is predicator.
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“The single biggest predicator was the expectation of what would happen if they didn’t show,” Hannaford-Agor said.
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Ohio also tends to go with landslides, too, so it's a good predicator.
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