| Lemma | predication |
|---|---|
| Categoria grammaticale | N |
| Lingua | inglese |
| Sigla | Bickerton (1981) |
| Titolo | Roots of Language |
| Sinonimi | |
| Rinvii | possession (inglese) |
| Traduzioni | |
| Citazioni | […] predications […] may be felt to be central in any structured language system: 'There is an X, X is at Y, Z has X, X is Z’s'. I shall refer to the relationships expressed by these predications as Existence, Location, Possession, and Ownership. I should emphasize that these labels are chosen only for convenience of reference and are not meant to have any particular semantic significance: “possession,” for instance, is grossly inadequate for the semantics of has, which might better, though still inadequately, be defined as “stands in a close and superordinate relationship to.” |