The Imperative sentence is always use in putting a (.) in the last sentence
demonstrative, declarative, interrogative and exclamatory
demonstrative, declarative, interrogative and exclamatory
Simple sentence, compound sentence, complex sentence and compound complex sentence.
The 4 types are declarative, imperative, interrogative, and exclamatory .
The 4 types of sentences according to structure:SIMPLE Sentence - conveys one complete idea or thought.COMPOUND Sentence - more than one thought, consisting of independent clauses, either of which could stand alone as a sentence, joined by a conjunction such as and, or, but, because.COMPLEX Sentence - has a thought expressed as one independent, with one or more dependent clauses.COMPOUND-COMPLEX Sentence - a complex sentence that also has a second independent clause.
number one is, I dont know. try searching at wikipedia :)
There are 4 different kinds of keels!
Sssp,sscp,cscp
Two important ways to classify sentences are structure and use.Structure is taught to show how sentences are written. The kinds of sentences as defined by use are simply a way to classify them, to understand how each is employed.The 4 types of sentences according to structure:SIMPLE Sentence - conveys one complete idea or thought.COMPOUND Sentence - more than one thought, consisting of independent clauses, either of which could stand alone as a sentence, joined by a conjunction such as and, or, but, because.COMPLEX Sentence - has a thought expressed as one independent, with one or more dependent clauses.COMPOUND-COMPLEX Sentence - a complex sentence that also has a second independent clause.The 4 kinds of sentence according to usage:DECLARATIVE - statement (ends with period)example: The car is green.INTERROGATIVE - question (ends with question mark)example: Are you hungry?IMPERATIVE - command (may end with either a period or exclamation mark)example: Eat your vegetables.EXCLAMATORY - express strong feeling (normally ends with an exclamation point)example: Oops! What a mess! Sorry.
I'm sorry but i Ate it now ~Chesca
joke, retorical, ugly pretty, loser' dud
A declarative sentence which makes a statement: Today is beautiful. The interrogative sentence which asks a question: What time will they arrive? The exclamatory sentence which shows a strong feeling: I am really disgusted at you! The imperative sentence which gives a command: Give this to the manager.