The imperative sense is a grammatical mood or form used when giving commands or making direct requests. It is often characterized by a verb in its base form, without any subject pronouns. For example, "Close the door!" or "Please pass me the salt."
It signals the end of the sentence.
You can only end a sentence with too not to.
A period is a dot (.) that signifies the end of a sentence.
You can end a sentence with a period.Hey, end it with an exclamation mark!What was the question?
The imperative sense is a grammatical mood or form used when giving commands or making direct requests. It is often characterized by a verb in its base form, without any subject pronouns. For example, "Close the door!" or "Please pass me the salt."
It signals the end of the sentence.
You can only end a sentence with too not to.
There is a period at the end of the sentence.
In proper English usage you do not end a sentence in a preposition, so at should not end the sentence Where is Jasmine is sufficient.
A period is a dot (.) that signifies the end of a sentence.
end is the noun in the sentence
You can end a sentence with a period.Hey, end it with an exclamation mark!What was the question?
A period (.), a question mark (?), or an exclamation point (!) signal the end of a sentence.
If the sentence is a statement it has to end in a period. If it is a question it would end in a question mark (?) and if the sentence indicates stong feeling it would end in an exclamation mark (!)
Yes. There is no English word that cannot end a sentence.
A preposition is not a good thing to end a sentence with.