All possible predicaments used as regards the Godhead refer to the substance; for nothing can be predicated relatively.
When Aristotle says, very truly, that if the First Substances were non-existent, none of the other Predicaments could exist, we must understand what he means by the term first.
Most of my predicaments have been very common-place predicaments, and the ways in which I have got out of them very ordinary and obvious ways.
But the human faculties are fortified by the art and practice of dialectics; the ten predicaments of Aristotle collect and methodize our ideas, [59] and his syllogism is the keenest weapon of dispute.
In all the predicaments which his excited mind had hastily recalled it was either his life or his companion's that was at stake.
That knowledge, which embraces concisely or in detail the predicaments as they actually are, is called 'right knowledge' by the wise.
The predicaments of Aristotle are the heads of a classification of terms as possible predicates of a particular thing or individual.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "predicaments" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.