Want this question answered?
No, it's an interrogative sentence, meaning, it asks a question. Declarative sentences make a statement: The movie starts at 4:30. The scissors are on the kitchen table. The cat has pooped on the stairs.
The four types of sentences :Declarative (make a statement) -- Bill went to the store.Interrogative (asks a question) -- Did Bill go to the store?Exclamatory (shows strong feeling) -- Bill took all my money!Imperative (a command or instruction) -- Tell him I want my money back.
Types of sentences: * declarative sentences - sentences that make statements. For example, The capital of the United States is Washington, DC. * interrogative sentences - sentences that ask questions, i.e. How many inches make up one foot? * imperative sentences - sentences that give commands. i.e. You must never swin alone. Note- Imperative sentences use an understood subject, you. i.e. Never swim alone. Stay here. * exclamatory sentences show emotion or surprise. i.e. He got straight A's on his report card!
exclamatory ends with a ! and declarative just ends with a . just think of the word declarative as you are declaring something therefor you need a period to it to make sure you make your point (.)
Yes. 'Could you ask your family to come?' Is not, but 'Ask your family to come' is.
The classification of a sentence based on function is as follows: declarative, exclamatory, interrogative, and imperative.Declarative sentences make a statement.Exclamatory sentences show strong emotion.Interrogative sentences ask questions.Imperative sentences give order or instructions.The classification of a sentence based on structure is a little more in-depth. Structure involves simple sentences, compound sentences, and complex sentences.Simple sentences only have one independent clause.Compound sentences have at least two independent clauses. Complex sentences require at least one independent clause and one dependent clause.
because you need 3 different numbers for 4 sentences
A declarative sentence is one that describes things that make a definite statement. It is essentially the complete opposite of a question.
One problem is to work out how to make best use of the purely declarative nature of functional languages.
To change a declarative sentence to an interrogative one, you can usually invert the subject and the auxiliary verb, add a question mark at the end, or use a question word like "who," "what," "where," "when," "why," or "how" at the beginning. For example, "She is coming." changes to "Is she coming?" or "Where is she coming?"
A declarative sentence is just a normal statement. It ends with a period. Example: The store is close to my house. An interrogative sentence asks a question. It ends with a question mark. Example: Do you like to go to the fair? An imperative sentence makes a command or a request and it tells you to do something. It ends with a period. Example: Make your bed before you go to school. An exclamatory sentence shows strong feeling. It ends with a exclamation point. Example: What a nice day it is! Those are the 4 kinds of sentences.
Wow what a girl!