Copula in a sentence as a noun

Da or the formal desu is known as a copula, standing for an assumed verb.

One example of this is the Gaussian copula used in VAR.

Here are the examples of copula use that wikipedia gives which require 是 in Chinese: Mary and John are my friends.

> Chinese similarly lacks a 'to be' copulaWhat?

Read about the "copula model" disaster, as your statement indicates you are unaware of its details.

Chinese grammar prefers stative verbs to combinations of copulas and adjectives.

Gaussian copulas were the same way. Given the price of two tranches on a reference portfolio, you could estimate the implied default correlation of the assets in the portfolio.

" None of these sentences actually contain a passive: the first is an existential sentence, the second is a simple copula, and the third uses the copula with an adjective, not a participle.

Gaussian copula models, and succeeding "base correlation" models were necessary to price all kinds of credit derivatives -- single-tranche CDOs, first-to-default baskets, whatever you want.

Moreover, the lesson totally muffs up Chinese grammar, because "" is not a "condensed form" of an expression that would include a copula verb in Chinese such as " [form of verb 'to be'] " but rather the sole grammatical way to convey the idea in Chinese.

I think the dubious assumptions in the two versions of the Mona Lisa one are equivalent; what's implied by "being overrated" is the same as what's implied by "really deserves".If you think "false impression" is bad because "the impression is false" has a copula in it, then congratulations: you just abolished adjectives.

Copula definitions

noun

an equating verb (such as `be' or `become') that links the subject with the complement of a sentence

See also: copulative