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- com·ple·mentcomplement (noun) · complements (plural noun)
- a number or quantity of something, especially that required to make a group complete:"at the moment we have a full complement of staff"
- the number of people required to crew a ship:"almost half the ship's complement of 322 were wounded"
- geometrythe amount in degrees by which a given angle is less than 90°.
- mathematicsthe members of a set that are not members of a given subset.
- grammarone or more words, phrases, or clauses governed by a verb (or by a nominalization or a predicative adjective) that complete the meaning of the predicate.
- (in systemic grammar) an adjective or noun that has the same reference as either the subject (as mad in he is mad) or the object (as mad in he drove her mad).
- physiologya group of proteins present in blood plasma and tissue fluid which combine with an antigen–antibody complex to bring about the lysis of foreign cells.
complement (verb) · complements (third person present) · complemented (past tense) · complemented (past participle) · complementing (present participle)Originlate Middle English (in the sense ‘completion’): from Latin complementum, from complere ‘fill up’ (see complete). Compare with compliment. - People also ask
- Complement means to provide something felt to be lacking or needed1. It can also refer to a number of people or things that makes something complete2. In grammar, a complement is part of a word or phrase that completes the predicate2. For example, in the sentence "She is happy", "happy" is the complement of the verb "is".Learn more:✕This summary was generated using AI based on multiple online sources. To view the original source information, use the "Learn more" links.Complement, supplement both mean to make additions to something. To complement is to provide something felt to be lacking or needed; it is often applied to putting together two things, each of which supplies what is lacking in the other, to make a complete whole: Two statements from different points of view may complement each other.www.dictionary.com/browse/complementA complement is a number of people or things that makes something complete: We had a full complement of reporters and photographers along. grammar A complement is part of a word or phrase that completes the predicate (= the part of a sentence that gives information about the subject), as “nothing” in “They told him nothing.”dictionary.cambridge.org/us/dictionary/english/com…
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