Basic English Syntax with Exercises

Suggested answer for Exercise 5

Predicates are heads that take arguments. Depending on the number of arguments a predicate has, predicates can be classified into different groups like one-place predicates, two-place predicates, etc. A one-place predicate is a predicate with one argument. It can be a verb (1a), an adjective (1b), a noun (1c) or a preposition (1d). A two-place predicate is a predicate that takes two arguments like the noun in (2a), the verb (2b), the adjective (2c) or the preposition in (2d). A three-place predicate has three arguments. In (3a) the three-place predicate is a noun; in (3b) it is a verb.

(1)a.John is sleeping.
b.John is nice.
c.student of Linguistics
d.in the room
(2)a.the enemy’s destruction of the city
b.John hates pets.
c.John is afraid of dogs.
d.I want you out of my room.
(3)a.Mary’s gift of a book to John.
b John gave a book to Mary.