A rhetorical sentence makes a questioning statement that does not expect an answer - it is only expected to make the listener think. An interrogative sentence asks a question that expects, if not requires, an answer from the listener.
A statement that ends in a question mark is called a rhetorical question. It is a figure of speech where a question is asked not to elicit an answer but to make a point or create emphasis.
You can turn a statement into a question by adding a question word (such as who, what, where, when, why, how) at the beginning of the statement, or by changing the word order to make it interrogative. Additionally, you can adjust the tone of your voice to indicate that you are asking a question.
To change a declarative sentence to an interrogative one, you can usually invert the subject and the auxiliary verb, add a question mark at the end, or use a question word like "who," "what," "where," "when," "why," or "how" at the beginning. For example, "She is coming." changes to "Is she coming?" or "Where is she coming?"
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.
Appending an interrogative pronoun followed by a terminating question mark does not really make a proper question out of a statement.
Declarative- is a statement and ends with a period(.) Interrogative- asks a question and ends with a question mark(?). Imperative- commands some on to do something and ends with a period(.). Exclamatory- shows strong feeling and ends with a exclamation mark(!).
"Make" is used for plural subjects or the pronouns "I" and "you" in interrogative sentences. For example, "Do they make their own decisions?" "Makes" is used for singular third-person subjects in interrogative sentences. For example, "Does he make his bed every day?"
You put a cowboy in some bread.Make it chunks of cowboy,not whole cowboy.
This is a statement, not a question. Just because you place a question mark at the end of a group of words does not make it interrogative.
This is not a question. This is a statement with a question mark. So if u want the answer, u better use ur head and make this phrase into an interrogative sentence (I'm sorry, u r so stupid u probably don't even know what an interrogative sentence is. Well it is a sentence that is asking u a question.) You welcome for ur English/Language/Arts lesson, dummy!!
Your question isn't even an interrogative sentence. That's what an interrogative sentence is; a question. Okay, I'm game. "Did it snow heavily?" That's the best I can do with what you've given me.