An imperative sentence ends with either a period or an exclammation mark.
Terminal punctuation marks are used at the end of a sentence, such as periods, question marks, and exclamation points. Internal punctuation marks are used within a sentence, such as commas, semicolons, and colons.
An imperative sentence is a sentence that expresses an order, a command, or a request. There are two punctuation marks that an imperative sentence can end with: a period (.) and an exclamation point (!).Examples of imperative sentences:1: Leave him alone. This sentence can also end in an exclamation point if the sentence becomes a harsh command or order: Leave him alone!2: Don't say that! This sentence can also end in a period if the sentence becomes a request or less aggressive order: Don't say that.I hope this helped!-EB
Generally, punctuation marks such as periods and question marks will precede the final quotation mark at the end of the sentence.
No, periods at the end of a sentence do not count as a separate word. They are punctuation marks used to indicate the end of a sentence.
Periods end a sentence. They are punctuation marks that look like dots.
A period or an exclamation point depending on the tone of the speaker.
No, imperative statements do not have question marks at the end. Imperative sentences give commands or make requests and end with a period.
.?!" full stop,question mark,exclamation mark,quotation marks.
Periods and commas are punctuation marks used in writing to indicate pauses or the end of a sentence.
The single word 'Go' can only be considered a sentence when followed by punctuation characters that end a sentence (exclamation marks, question marks, period).Example : "Go!" (this is a single-word imperative form with the subject you understood)
A full stop can be used at the end of a sentence in dialogue to indicate the end of a statement or sentence. It is a common punctuation mark used in writing to separate sentences and will often follow the closing quotation marks in dialogue.
comma, semi-colon, hyphen, colon, speech marks.