A declarative sentence refers to something that has been made known or explained. The question then follows, such as 'I have explained, do you understand?
A declaritive sentence is a command.
think about it
Yes, "Did you hurt yourself?" is an interrogative sentence since it is in the form of a question. A declarative sentence would be "You hurt yourself." without the question mark.
a period ...... yup those .....
In linguistics, a declarative sentence is a type of sentence that makes a statement or declaration. It is one of the four main sentence types, along with interrogative, imperative, and exclamatory sentences. Declarative sentences typically end with a period and are used to convey information or facts.
this is an imperative sentence, as it commands or gives instruction.
A full stop.
The recently deceased knight had bravely faced the enormous dragon.
Yes, a declarative sentence makes a statement or expresses a fact, opinion, or idea. It ends with a period.
I presume you mean the sentence, "Did you know that Robert Redford was once elected sewer commisioner of Provo, Utah?" Technically, it is a question, meaning it is a interrogative sentence. It does make a declaration about Mr. Redford, but (more precisely) it asks a question of the person spoken to. Kind of like the sentence, "You are aware, aren't you, that any sentence that ends with a question mark is an interrogative sentence?"
Actually it is called a declarative sentence, and it is a sentence that simply states or tells about something. It is followed with a period at the end. Example. We ate lunch at Fat Burger yesterday.
If the housing department doesn't condemn that building soon it's going to fall down by itself.