Emphatic
indacative
The verb phrase "take cover" is in the imperative mood in this sentence. The imperative mood is an order, as when you tell someone to do something. The unstated subject of the sentence is "you": "[You] take cover..."
The verb phrase "take cover" is in the imperative mood in this sentence. The imperative mood is an order, as when you tell someone to do something. The unstated subject of the sentence is "you": "[You] take cover..."
There isn't any noun. The verb is stop. The object 'it' is a pronoun. Immediately is an adverb. The subject of the sentence is implied, 'you', also a pronoun.
If the sentence is: "Alex, stop running." Then the verb would be "stop."
imperative
Imperative A+
The verb phrase "take cover" is in the imperative mood in this sentence. The imperative mood is an order, as when you tell someone to do something. The unstated subject of the sentence is "you": "[You] take cover..."
The verb phrase "take cover" is in the imperative mood in this sentence. The imperative mood is an order, as when you tell someone to do something. The unstated subject of the sentence is "you": "[You] take cover..."
There isn't any noun. The verb is stop. The object 'it' is a pronoun. Immediately is an adverb. The subject of the sentence is implied, 'you', also a pronoun.
If the sentence is: "Alex, stop running." Then the verb would be "stop."
imperative
imperative
indicative
"Be punctual" is a complete sentence because it has a subject ("you" understood) and a verb ("be") that expresses a complete thought or command.
The subjunctive mood is for expressing wishes, suggestions, or desires, and is usually indicated by a verb such as wish or suggest, paired then with a subjunctive verb
Indicative (:
imperative.