"Stop that noise! Listen to me!"
"Clean your room right now!" This is an example of an imperative sentence because it gives a command or instruction to someone.
An example of an imperative sentence is "Please close the door." It is a command or request that tells someone to perform a specific action. Imperative sentences are characterized by the use of a verb in the base form without a subject.
Yes, imperative sentences can end with a period. For example, "Please close the door."
No, the correct use of the imperative is to give a command or instruction directly. In your example, it would be clearer and more concise to say "It is imperative that..." to convey necessity or importance.
Exclamatory: "What a beautiful day!" Imperative: "Please pass me the salt."
An example of an imperative sentence is: Pick up that book.
Get out!
Get out!
"Go clean your room". That is an imperative sentence because imperative means a command.
"Clean your room right now!" This is an example of an imperative sentence because it gives a command or instruction to someone.
An example of an imperative sentence is "Please close the door." It is a command or request that tells someone to perform a specific action. Imperative sentences are characterized by the use of a verb in the base form without a subject.
An imperative sentence is a sentence that gives a command. An example of an imperative sentence would be: Hand me those pamphlets, please.
Yes, imperative sentences can end with a period. For example, "Please close the door."
The imperative mood is commanding: Come here. Stop! Don't do that. Have a good vacation!
It is a command; do is in the imperative.
No, the correct use of the imperative is to give a command or instruction directly. In your example, it would be clearer and more concise to say "It is imperative that..." to convey necessity or importance.
Juxtaposed - 2009 was released on: USA: May 2009 Italy: April 2010