There are no 'declarative' pronouns in English. You may mean demonstrative pronouns.
The demonstrative pronouns take the place of a noun to indicate or point out particular person , place, or thing as near in place or time, or far in place or time.
The demonstrative pronouns are:THIS, THAT, THESE, and THOSE
Where can be a conjunction, an adverb, a pronoun and a noun.
If I say "The mall is gay", I am using "gay" as a declarative adjective.
"It had to come by horse" is a declarative sentence. A declarative sentence is a type of sentence that makes a statement or expresses an opinion. In this sentence, the subject is "it," the verb is "had to come," and the method of transportation is specified as "by horse."
declarative sentence
No, the word "pronoun" is a noun, a word for a part of speech; a word for a thing.The pronoun that takes the place of the noun 'pronoun' is it.Example: A pronoun is a part of speech. It takes the place of a noun or another pronoun in a sentence.
It is a declarative sentence.
It is an imperative sentence. The pronoun "you" is implied, which happens in imperative sentences.
Short version: interrogative means question, declarative means statement. In the context of learning Latin you might see these words in relation to sentences (an interrogative sentence is one that asks a question "Is that a pig?", a declarative sentence is one that asserts something, "John is a pig."). Also you'll see interrogative used to describe question words (think who/what/where/etc.); for example, an "interrogative pronoun" - that is, the type of pronoun used to ask a question (so in "Who threw that rock?" = Quis illum lapidem iecit? , who/quis is the interrogative pronoun).
EXCLAMATORY!
Declarative language is language that states something. A declarative statement always ends with a period.
The symbol for declarative is usually a period or full stop (.), indicating the end of a declarative sentence.
I can give you many declarative sentences.(declarative) The dog walked down the street.(declarative) The cat puts socks in the dog bowl.(declarative) It is hard to do a toddler's hair. The curtains fell down.
declarative
It is a declarative.
Yes, that is a declarative sentence. It makes a statement or expresses an opinion without posing a question or giving a command.
A declarative sentence is ended with a period.
declarative form