Yes because a declarative sentence tells you something and the sentence tells you that some crickets kegs live out doors.
A declarative sentence is a statement, and the most common type of sentence. Some examples of declarative sentences would be: I have to go home. My home is in Iowa. I will drive home. The sky is getting dark.
A declarative sentence is just one that is not a question. You can think of some sentences about animals if you try.i have a cat.The dog ran away.
A declarative sentence is a type of declaration. While a imperative sentences issues some come of command, a declarative sentence gives a statement and ends in a period. A imperative sentence can end with a period or exclamation point.
It is a declarative sentence.
It is a declarative sentence.
To transform a declarative sentence into an interrogative sentence, you typically invert the subject and auxiliary verb. For example, "You are coming" becomes "Are you coming?" In some cases, you may need to add a question word like "what," "where," "why," etc. to the beginning of the sentence.
The difference between a declarative sentence and an imperative sentence is that a declarative sentence is a statement and an imperative sentence is a command.Here is an example of a declarative sentence:A spider has eight legs.Here is an example of an imperative sentence:Please go get me some water
Some kinds of sentences include: Declarative Sentences - statement and ends with period Interrogative Sentences-Question and ends with question mark Imperative Sentences-Strong Feeling And ends with exlamation Point
imperative
Usually the term indicative refers to the "Mood of a verb" and not a sentence. See any English grammar book to see the term "mood of a verb. (Yes that is the grammatical name of it -- I did not make it up.) However, some people do seem to use the phrase . . . "indicative sentence . . . " They generally are expressing what is called normally a "declarative sentence". Declarative sentences express a true or false claim or condition. It reports fact. Opinion should be left out. If you ever heard of the expression "Just the facts Ma'am" then that is requesting a declarative sentence and that is all it should be.
As a declarative sentence, it means, "You're going to be there [some other place removed from where you are]." As a question, it means, "Are you going to be there [some other place removed from where you are]?"
If I say "The mall is gay", I am using "gay" as a declarative adjective.