7.5 Predicative Use
The Predicative use (also called the predicate use) asserts something about the noun
- In English translation, we must insert the applicable form of the verb “to be”
- The noun is the subject, and the adjective is the predicate of the sentence: “The book is good.”
- In some ways, the rules for Hebrew Predicative use are the opposite of Attributive rules
- The Predicative adjective will NEVER have the article
- The Predicative adjective can come before or after the noun
- The only ambiguity is when both the adjective and noun are indefinite and the adjective comes after the noun
- Examples:
- טוֹבָה הָאִשָּׁה - “the woman is good”
- הָאִשָּׁה טוֹבָה - “the woman is good”
- טוֹבָה אִשָּׁה - “a woman is good”
- אִשָּׁה טוֹבָה - this can either be Attributive “a good woman” or “a woman is good”
PREDICATIVE MNEMONIC
Predicative dePrived of the article; Perhaps Prior