Yes, it's a command. "You" is the subject and "will go" is the verb. That's all you need to make an English sentence.
The one that is NOT a sentence fragment and uses correct sentence grammar is:He liked to go fishing.
Yes, "When did you go?" is a sentence fragment because it is missing a subject. Adding a subject, such as "Where did you go," would make it a complete sentence.
"not" is the adverb in that sentence. It modifies the verb "go".
The nouns in the sentence are California and summer.
Quotations should go after the period at the end of the sentence when copying a sentence from a book.
frame a sentence for phrasal verbs go about ,goabout with , go along, go back
The pronouns in the sentence are: you and us.
That sentence is not correct. I would suggest, you want to go to Canada.
Yes, you can start a sentence with "where," such as "Where did you go yesterday?" or "Where is the nearest grocery store?"
The sentence "I wanted to go to the ballet I was forced to go to the basketball game" is a run on sentence. It should be split into two sentences, or joined with a conjunction.
1 because Go. is a sentence it has a subject and a verbSubject:an implied YouVerb: Go
No, the sentence "i wants to go here" is not complete because it is missing the verb "want" in the correct form. A correct and complete sentence would be "I want to go here."