Declametory
We prepared the body for burial. They held a burial ceremony for his mother. Everyone was sorrowful at the burial ceremony.
"Will you come to my wedding ceremony tomorrow night?" "There is a ceremony in the Church tonight." "What are you wearing for her wedding ceremony?" "Do not forget to be present for her graduation ceremony."
Celebrate is the verb in the sentence.
At the commencement of the meeting, everybody did not expect it to last long.
Exclamatory
Do you mean how to use the word "enough" in a sentence? Loureen picked enough apples for everyone at the ceremony tonight.
compound-complex
The rehearsal for the wedding ceremony is tomorrow night. Are you wearing a cap and gown for your graduation ceremony? They've lived together for four years and say that they don't need any special ceremony to prove they're married. The Brownies will become Girl Scouts at a special "flying up" ceremony.
I came to a ceremony with my friend. or The ceremony didn't turn out very well.
This sentence is a declarative sentence, as it makes a statement about the award ceremony taking place on Tuesday.
No, the word celebrate is a verb: celebrate, celebrates, celebrating, celebrated.The verb to celebrate is to observe in some way a person or thing with a ceremony, a party, an event, or a public acknowledgement.Example: We will celebrate our parents' anniversary with a party.A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence.Example: The party is to celebrate my parents' anniversary. They have been married for forty years. (the pronoun 'they' takes the place of the noun 'parents' in the second sentence)