Knowing that interrogative means: 'having a form of a question,' let's try this sentence: " Who, why, and what are interrogatives."
What interrogative questions do you have for the suspect?
Though you were pressed but did you seek permission to fall out?
The word "that" is not an interrogative pronoun; it is a relative pronoun that introduces restrictive clauses in a sentence. Interrogative pronouns, such as "who," "what," "which," and "whom," are used to ask questions.
An interrogative sentence is a sentence that asks a question. It typically begins with a question word like who, what, when, where, why, or how, or includes an auxiliary verb like is, are, can, will, would, etc. Interrogative sentences are used to gather information or seek clarification.
To change an interrogative sentence into a declarative sentence, you can simply remove the question word (who, what, where, when, why, how) and rephrase the sentence as a statement. For example, change "Are you going to the store?" to "You are going to the store."
Has anyone ever stood on top of the mountain before?
give me that phone now
An interrogative sentence with the word gloomy would be, "Why are you so gloomy today?"
An interrogative sentence is a sentence that asks a question; for example: 'What is an interrogative?'An interrogative pronoun is a word that introduces an interrogative sentence. The interrogative pronouns are: who, whom, what, which, whose.Interrogative is an adjective that means to ask a question.
Though you were pressed but did you seek permission to fall out?
An interrogative sentence is one that asks a question. Do you understand? That is an interrogative sentence. Comes from word interrogate, to ask.
interrogative sentence
it is kuta
write an interrogative sentence about:a sports car
This food tastes like brussel sprouts!" shouted Jenna in an evoke way
What is an interrogative sentence? is an interrogative sentence. An interrogative sentence asks a question.
The word "that" is not an interrogative pronoun; it is a relative pronoun that introduces restrictive clauses in a sentence. Interrogative pronouns, such as "who," "what," "which," and "whom," are used to ask questions.
No, the word THESE is functioning as an adjective(describing the noun 'scarves') not a pronoun. The sentence is an interrogative sentence (a question).The pronoun 'these' is a demonstrative pronoun, a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence indicating near or far in place or time.Example: Which of these is the scarf Mom said she wanted.The pronoun WHICH is an interrogative pronoun, a word that introduces an interrogative sentence (a question).