I trust you mean Kant's Categorical Imperative. It's a way of checking whether or not something is ethical by asking how things would work out if everybody did it.
The Aztec calendar had both a practical purpose. This purpose was to keep track of the days of the year. Like the Mayan calendar, the calendar could be used more than one year in a row.
Theoretical, sociological, practical
"Thank God" is correct, both as an imperative or as an interjection. "Thanks God" is incorrect. You could say "thanks to God," but that is an unusual construct.
Shuker ka 3 tareqa tahrer kejiya
Either you're a dim-witted person for thinking I'd know the answer or you're playing a practical joke on me. ;)
I trust you mean Kant's Categorical Imperative. It's a way of checking whether or not something is ethical by asking how things would work out if everybody did it.
mint
big knats, or small sugar flies
Imperative
imperative
imperative
You are very imperative.
Inessential is an antonym for imperative.
It is an imperative sentence. The pronoun "you" is implied, which happens in imperative sentences.
"Go clean your room". That is an imperative sentence because imperative means a command.
All the imperative verbs.
giving a command imperative sentence