a sentence with a command & you or the person/people the command is being given to is the subject.
Ex: Put the pencil down. It is being directed to you
Ex: Class, take out your homeork. It's being directed to the class.
This is an imperative sentence, which is a type of sentence that gives a command or makes a request.
It is an imperative sentence.
Imperative.
There is no type of pronoun called an imperative pronoun. You may mean a pronoun that is the implied subject of an imperative sentence.An imperative sentence gives a direct command. An imperative sentence is the only type of sentence that does not require the subject be used. The subject is implied; for example:Stop!Look.Come here.Blend in one cup of milk.The subject of this type of imperative sentence is the pronoun you.
imperative
A imperative sentence shows a command, not a question. It is a type of sentence that gives a direct instruction or order to someone.
Yes, this type of sentence is called imperative sentence.
It is an imperative question.
i think a fragment
This is an imperative sentence. It gives a command to do something.
An imperative sentence is a sentence that gives a command. An example of an imperative sentence would be: Hand me those pamphlets, please.
An imperative sentence is a type of sentence that gives instructions, commands, or advice. It is usually direct and lacks a subject (though the subject "you" is implied). For example, "Close the door" is an imperative sentence.