Usually the term indicative refers to the "Mood of a verb" and not a sentence. See any English grammar book to see the term "mood of a verb. (Yes that is the grammatical name of it -- I did not make it up.) However, some people do seem to use the phrase . . . "indicative sentence . . . " They generally are expressing what is called normally a "declarative sentence". Declarative sentences express a true or false claim or condition. It reports fact. Opinion should be left out. If you ever heard of the expression "Just the facts Ma'am" then that is requesting a declarative sentence and that is all it should be.
The sentence "Buster has escaped from his dog pen" is in the indicative mood, which is used for statements of fact.
indicative The indicative mood is used for factual statements and positive beliefs.
indicative
Indicative (:
"it seems to me that such arrant hypocrisy is indicative of a thoroughly opportunistic approach to running for office," i said sadly.
All the signs he was showing were indicative of a mental disorder.
Indicative, the indicative mood is used to make factual statements.
yes
The sentence "Buster has escaped from his dog pen" is in the indicative mood, which is used for statements of fact.
indicative The indicative mood is used for factual statements and positive beliefs.
indicative
No. This not subjunctive.
No. "How are you" is an interrogative sentence, one of the other subtypes of sentences with a very in the indicative mood.
Indicative (:
One way of saying it would be: Follow the indications thoroughly.
The past indicative is the verb form used to express completed actions or states in the past. It is considered a verb tense in English grammar.
The verb, "was", in the sentence "He was good" is in the simple past indicative tense. A sentence as a whole is not characterized by tense, which is a property of verbs and verbals only.