Predicates and Arguments: Difference between revisions
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Revision as of 13:56, 19 April 2017
Semantic analysis of sentences into predicates and arguments
Note: Many of the sentences in this section are taken from or based on examples in Hornby, A.S. (1975) Guide to Patterns and Usage in English. Second Edition. Cornelsen & Oxford University Press.
In these exercises you are supposed to analyze a complete sentence into its predicate and the arguments of the predicate. Each predicate may have 1-3 arguments. You write the predicate into the empty box labeled Predicate, together with a different variable for each argument. Then you write into the empty box of each variable position the words that make up that argument.
Sample problem and solution:
Example: They call the doctor.
Expected answer:
Predicate = x calls y
x = They
y = the doctor
z = -
Note:
- Type the words into the boxes exactly as they appear in the examples.
- Enter all predicates in the 3rd person singular present tense.
- To signal that a box is empty, enter the minus sign: -