No, 'How will you know that it is love?' is a question, an interrogative sentence.
Even the best of love chokes.
declarative sentence is a kind of sentence that tells or describe directly about something.it ends with period(.) i.e. Lucy love him.
A declarative sentence makes a statement: I love you. The pen is on the desk of my aunt. The chicken crosses the road to get to the other side. I came, I saw, I conquered.
it is a flat out lie. no matter how much you love someone and they love you it is never enough. you need them to be your everlasting companion.
It is not actually a sentence. It is a complete subject with no predicate. A sentence would be "This is an example of what love is supposed to be."
Je m'aime! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "I love me!" The declarative/exclamatory sentence also translates into English as "I love myself!" The pronunciation will be "zhuh mem" in Italian.
An embedded sentence is a sentence within a sentence. For example, "She said that she would come tomorrow" contains the embedded sentence "that she would come tomorrow." Another example is "I heard him say 'I love you,'" where "'I love you'" is the embedded sentence.
I'm not sure that I know the route well enough.
Make it a question. Usual method (especially with verb TO BE): invert subject and verb: Fred is stupid Is Fred stupid? Also common: use the verb TO DO: The boy loves the girl Does the boy love the girl? In compound tenses, invert auxiliary verb and subject: The British are coming! Are the British coming?
Example sentence - We admire his use of the language of love.
Amo divertirmi! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "I love to have fun!" The declarative/exclamatory sentence translates literally into English as "I do love to entertain myself!" The pronunciation will be "A-mo DEE-ver-TEER-mee" in Italian.
Love and lust are not always easily distinguishable. I love your loving. But will you love me forever?