Difference between revisions of "Complement (predicative)"

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The term '''complement''' is sometimes used to denote the grammatical funtion of predicative phrases, in the same sense as [[predicate nominal]]. This terminology is widely known especially from Quirk et al. 1985.
 
The term '''complement''' is sometimes used to denote the grammatical funtion of predicative phrases, in the same sense as [[predicate nominal]]. This terminology is widely known especially from Quirk et al. 1985.
  
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Revision as of 14:24, 2 July 2007

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The term complement is sometimes used to denote the grammatical funtion of predicative phrases, in the same sense as predicate nominal. This terminology is widely known especially from Quirk et al. 1985.

Examples

Subject complement: The country became independent.

Object complement: Most people considered Picasso a genius.

Polysemy

The term complement has many other uses, see complement.

References

Quirk, Randolph & Sidney Greenbaum & Geoffrey Leech & Jan Svartvik. 1985. A comprehensive grammar of the English language. London: Longman.