In the question and answer flow for imperative sentences, the question is typically implied rather than stated explicitly. The answer to an imperative sentence is the action that is being commanded or requested. For example, in the imperative sentence "Please close the door," the question implied is "Will you close the door?" and the answer is the action of closing the door.
interrogative = question imperative = command
A imperative sentence shows a command, not a question. It is a type of sentence that gives a direct instruction or order to someone.
This is an imperative sentence, which is a type of sentence that gives a command or makes a request.
It is called an imperative sentence; the sentence purpose is imperative. (As opposed to a declarative sentence, which tells a fact, or an interrogative sentence, which asks a question.)
It is an imperative question.
I think that the sentence is a imperative sentence.
An imperative sentence is a sentence that gives a command. An example of an imperative sentence would be: Hand me those pamphlets, please.
Imperative
An imperative sentence is a command or suggestion. It does not become an exclamatory sentence just because it ends in an exclamation mark. An exclamatory sentence expresses emotion or fervor, and may be declarative or interrogative (for example, a strong statement or an hysterical question).
Ask is always a verb. If ask is used at the beginning of a sentence then the sentence would be an imperative sentence/question. Ask Jon to stop the noise. This is an imperative question because there is no subject. The subject is implied/suggested. The subject is 'you'. (You) ask Jon to stop the noise.
It is an imperative sentence. The pronoun "you" is implied, which happens in imperative sentences.
You are very imperative.