Examples
The most widely acknowledged predicative expressions are adjectives and nominals: ::The idea was ridiculous. — Predicative adjective over the subject. ::He seems nice. — Predicative adjective over the subject. ::Bob is a postman. — Predicative nominal over the subject. ::They were all happy campers. — Predicative nominal over the subject. ::That shrimp dish made him sick. — Predicative adjective over the object. ::We painted the door white. — Predicative adjective over the object. ::They elected him president. — Predicative nominal over the object. ::They called Jill a thief. — Predicative nominal over the object. The formulations "over the subject" and "over the object" indicate that the predicative expression is expressing a property that is assigned to the subject or to the object. For example, the predicative expression ''a thief'' in the last sentence serves to assign to ''Jill'' the property of being a thief. Predicative nominals over subjects are also called ''predicate nominatives'', a term borrowed from Latin grammars and indicating the morphological case that such expressions bear (in Latin).Further examples
While the most widely acknowledged predicative expressions are adjectives and nominals, most syntactic categories can be construed as predicative expressions, e.g. ::The snake is in the bag. — Predicative prepositional phrase. ::That is when it happens. — Predicative clause. ::It is soon. — Predicative adverb. There are, however, certain categories that cannot appear as predicative expressions. Adverbs ending in ''-ly'', for instance, cannot appear as predicative expressions, e.g. :: *The event was splendidly. — Failed attempt to use an adverb ending in ''-ly'' as a predicative expression. :: *Our ideas are insightfully. — Failed attempt to use an adverb ending in ''-ly'' as a predicative expression. These examples raise the following fundamental question: What characteristic of words and phrases allows or prohibits them from appearing as predicative expressions? The answer to this question is not apparent.Predicative adjectives vs. attributive adjectives
Predicative expressions are not attributive expressions. The distinction is illustrated best using predicative and attributive adjectives:See for instance Crystal (1997:303). ::a. The man is friendly. — Predicative adjective. ::b. the friendly man — Attributive adjective. ::a. One snake was large. — Predicative adjective. ::b. one large snake — Attributive adjective. ::a. His bag is damp. — Predicative adjective. ::b. his damp bag — Attributive adjective. A given clause usually contains a single predicative expression (unless coordination is involved), but it can contain multiple attributive expressions, e.g. ''The friendly man found a large snake in his damp bag.''Predicatives vs. arguments and adjuncts
Predicative expressions are typically ''not'' arguments, e.g. ::a. She was our friend. — Predicative nominal. ::b. She visited our friend. — Argument nominal. ::a. That is an excuse. — Predicative nominal. ::b. He produced an excuse. — Argument nominal. The predicative expressions here are properties that are assigned to the subject, whereas the arguments cannot be construed as such properties. Predicative expressions are also typically ''not'' adjuncts, e.g. ::a. The bag is under the bed. — Predicative prepositional phrase. ::b. Something is moving under the bed. — Adjunct prepositional phrase. ::a. The dispute was after the talk was completely over. — Predicative clause. ::b. Everybody relaxed after the talk was completely over. — Adjunct clause. The predicative expressions again serve to assign a property to the subject, e.g. the property of being under the bed. In contrast, the adjuncts serve to establish the situational context. One can hence acknowledge a three-way distinction between predicative expressions, arguments, and adjuncts. However, upon deeper examination, the lines between these categories become blurred and overlap can occur. For instance, in the sentence ''Bill arrived drunk'', one can judge ''drunk'' to be both a predicative expression (because it serves to assign a property to ''Bill'') and an adjunct (because it appears optionally in the sentence).In other languages
Predicative expressions exist in most if not all languages. In languages that have morphological case, predicative nominals typically appear in the nominative case (e.g., German and Russian) or instrumental case (e.g. Russian), although predicative expressions over objects generally bear the same case as the object. Some languages lack an equivalent of the copula ''be'', and many languages omit the copula in some contexts or optionally (see zero copula), which means that the case marker plays a greater role since it helps distinguish predicative nominals from argument nominals. Some languages (e.g., Tabasaran) have a separate predicative case.See also
* Adjunct * Argument * Copula * Linking verb * Nominal sentence *Notes
{{Reflist, 30emReferences
*Burton-Roberts 1997. Analysing sentences: An introduction to English grammar. London: Longman. *Crystal, D. 1997. A dictionary of linguistics and phonetics, 4th edition, Oxford, UK: Blackwell. *Hudson, R. 1984. Word grammar. New York: Basil Blackwell Publisher. *Lester, M. 1971. Introductory transformational grammar of English. New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, Inc. *Radford, A. 2004. English syntax: An introduction. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. Syntactic entities