Go meet the dog.
I'm meeting a dog!
'My dog and I' if this is the subject of the sentence or clause; 'My dog and me' if this is the object of the sentence or clause. Examples:My dog and I ran home when the rain started.My neighbor and her dog often walk with my dog and me.
"The boy chased the dog" is a complete sentence. The verb, chased, is transitive. The object is "dog".
A dog howled loudly all night is a sentence.
The dog is the direct object in that sentence.
It is a sentence. It is a declarative sentence also because it's giving a demand.
exclamatory
Sentences according to purpose :1. declarative: declares or narrates a sentence, as in, "The dog is walking by the road."2. imperative: gives a command, as in, "Wash the dishes after you eat."3. interrogative: asks a question, as in, "Are you going out tonight?"4. exclamatory: a sudden feeling or emotion, as in, "Watch out!"Sentences according to structure :simple sentencecompound sentencecomplex sentencecompound complex sentence
You can use find as a imperative because you can say find me that dog, and find me right now there are many many more ways
The four types of sentences are declarative, interrogative, imperative, and exclamatory.Declarative sentences makes a statement and ends with a period.(Example: The dog stood still.)Interrogative sentences asks a question and ends with a question mark.(Example: Is Earth the third planet from the sun?)Imperative sentences gives a command or states a request and ends with a period.(Example: Start washing the clothes in the morning.)Exclamatory sentences expresses a strong feeling and ends with an exclamation mark.(Example: The sky is so beautiful!)
sentence that gives an order or command Examples: Give me that book! Clean your room! Do your homework. Take the dog for a walk, please. Don’t touch that! Do come to visit us whenever you’re in town. Push!
I have mistaken the dog for a pig. Like that ^
It could be either. 'Sit!' as an imperative form of the verb to sit (an instruction given to a dog, for example) is a sentence in its own right. Sit can also be just one word in a sentence, for example 'I asked you not to sit there.' In that case it would be a fragment.
Imperative SentencesTurn off the television!Leave me alone!Give me that, now!Please quiet down.Let the dog out.Take that pie out of the oven.Return that book to the library on time.Don't be late for school.Finish your homework after dinner.Throw me the ball!Let your sister have that toy.Write a letter to your congressman.
The sons mom told him to tell his dog to go retrieve the newspaper.
the dog
Voice would be a verb in the following sentence. I'm going to voice my opinion on the new housing project at the meeting tonight.
'There is a dog' is the complete subject of the sentence. It consists of the subject 'dog' and the linking verb 'is'.