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Answer for the clue "An equating verb (such as `be' or `become') that links the subject with the complement of a sentence ", 6 letters:
copula

Alternative clues for the word copula

Word definitions for copula in dictionaries

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English Word definitions in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
noun EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS ▪ Here are three of the most noticeable grammatical traits: Omission of the copula is: You out the game.

WordNet Word definitions in WordNet
n. an equating verb (such as `be' or `become') that links the subject with the complement of a sentence [syn: copulative , linking verb ] [also: copulae (pl)]

Wiktionary Word definitions in Wiktionary
n. 1 (context linguistics grammar English) A word, usually a verb, used to link the subject of a sentence with a predicate (usually a subject complement or an adverbial), that unites or associates the subject with the predicate. 2 (context statistics English) ...

Wikipedia Word definitions in Wikipedia
Copula may refer to: Copula (linguistics) , a word used to link subject and predicate Indo-European copula , this word in the Indo-European languages Copula (music) , a type of polyphonic texture similar to organum Copula (probability theory) , a function ...

Usage examples of copula.

Permanent Copula loping toward him, its twin heads and arms bobbing, one half of the creature serene, the other half straining to realize every pleasure Alien City had to offer.

Creatures like the Permanent Copula came, catching rides on freighters, seeking their fortune.

We hereby nominate our faithful charger Copula Felix hereditary Grand Vizier and announce that we have this day repudiated our former spouse and have bestowed our royal hand upon the princess Selene, the splendour of night.

Then, boom, into a null-g suite, with a proleptic copula imbedded in their gliomas.

The proposition is composed of two terms and the copula, one term constituting the subject of the proposition and the other the predicate.

In the Sumnia Theologica Thomas Aquinas most usually uses the term carnal intercourse, and then there's coition, or vera copula, but it is hard for me to think of-us-in those terms.

English very often employs the active participle to express the meaning of a continuative tense, combining the participle with a copula like "is" or "was", e.

It is generally assumed that these copulas would be used as in English, for instance like this: I parma ná carnë.

The final version of Tolkien's Quenya translation of the Hail Mary, published in January 2002, leaves out several copulas: Aistana elyë, ar aistana i yávë mónalyo = "blessed [art] thou, and blessed [is] the fruit of thy womb".

Thus, the future tense form of the copulas derived from the stem NÂ "to be" (cf.

Wister (Heller) had polygamously married Maizie Spread, Toots Switch and Dolores Pubiano de Copula.