An interrogative sentence is a sentence that asks a question.
An interrogative pronoun is a pronoun that introduces a question.
The interrogative pronouns are: who, whom, what, which, whose.
The example sentence contains no interrogative pronouns and is not an interrogative sentence.
The interrogative pronoun is 'whom', an objective pronoun. It appears at the beginning of the sentence because it is a question sentence; to show that it is a correct objective pronoun, you must make the question into a statement: You did invite whom to church.
The phrase "must have" is usually regarded as a compound verb, but some grammarians might say that it consists of the active verb "must" and the infinitive verbal "have". ("Must" is one of the few verbs in English for which the word "to" can be omitted in the infinitive form of an immediately following verb.)
The following are examples: "Care must be taken not to disturb sleeping bears." "When he was hurt, he needed medical care."
Change "tenaciously strive" to "try hard."
depends on where he starts eating
must i reinforce to you the importance of telling the truth
i dont know what church vip is but it must stand for very interrogative people
Quem can be an assortment of things such as relative pronouns, interrogative pronouns, or interrogative adjectives in Latin. You must first mind out what it might match in order to figure out whether it's a pronoun or adjective. Quem the in the accusative case for Masculine Singular in an Interrogative adjective. It's in the Masculine and Feminine Singular case in the Interrogative pronoun. In a relative pronoun it is also Masculine Singular. In a relative pronoun it can mean "who" or "which". In the Interrogative pronouns it can mean "who" or "what". In the interrogative adjective it means "which"
The child must reach the age of eighteen.The child must reach the age of eighteen.The child must reach the age of eighteen.The child must reach the age of eighteen.
A declarative sentence makes a statement or expresses an opinion, while an interrogative sentence asks a question. Example of declarative: "The sun is shining." Example of interrogative: "Is it raining outside?"
The interrogative pronoun is 'whom', an objective pronoun. It appears at the beginning of the sentence because it is a question sentence; to show that it is a correct objective pronoun, you must make the question into a statement: You did invite whom to church.
Since there is nothing following, the answer must be none of them.Since there is nothing following, the answer must be none of them.Since there is nothing following, the answer must be none of them.Since there is nothing following, the answer must be none of them.
Since there are no following units, the answer must be none of them!Since there are no following units, the answer must be none of them!Since there are no following units, the answer must be none of them!Since there are no following units, the answer must be none of them!
There is no nuke in Halo Reach. You must be thinking of Call of Duty.
"Physical tolerance" is when you must consume more of a drug to reach the same affect.
After beating ripper roo the next level will become available and you must clear this level and the following levels to reach the next boss Koala Kong.
You must OD on gas medicine.