An equating verb (such as `be' or `become') that links the subject with the complement of a sentence.
Sinônimos
Examples for "copulative"
Examples for "copulative"
1But the conjunction is often omitted in copulative and adversative clauses, as in Sec.
2Tom continued to strut spasmodically, making vulgar copulative motions.
3The reproductive apparatus comprises the different organs of sex (embryonic glands, sexual ducts, and copulative organs).
4And he underlines in red ink the word "however," perhaps as mysterious a copulative as has ever appeared in British prose.
5Conjunctions are divided into two sorts, the Copulative and Disjunctive.
1The round copper copula, green with age, stabbed the night sky.
2As a verb, it does duty as predicate and copula combined.
3He knew the correlations spat out by the Gaussian copula were a fantasy.
4There are two kinds of copula, one for affirmative and one for negative statements.
5The want of a copula is another instance of the primitive character of the tongue.
6The females of both species remained receptive after first copula and eventually mated multiple times.
7His WIRED cover story on the Gaussian copula function was later turned into a tattoo.
8Logically, it is merely the copula of a judgement.
9Analyse the following propositions into subject, copula and predicate:-
10The adverbial expression which thus appears to qualify the copula is known as 'the mode.'
11For such an unnecessary part of speech as a real copula does not exist in Japanese.
12The Gaussian copula was, in hindsight, a disaster.
13What looks at first, therefore, like a copula turns out to be merely an impersonal intransitive verb.
14There was no visible copula of the tablet with cones; no antennae between it and the circled shields.
15The material form of the copula is an accident of language, and a matter of indifference to logic.
16The unnecessary copula stars his pages.