If you are looking for an example of a declarative sentence, it could be any statement. "She walked the dog" is an example of a declarative sentence. Other examples include "She baked a cake" and "He was on the swim team." Any statement declaring something is a declarative sentence.
"Ouch, that hurts" is an exclamatory sentence because it conveys strong feelings or emotions, in this case, pain.
Yes, a declarative sentence makes a statement or expresses a fact, opinion, or idea. It ends with a period.
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.
The sentence "My cellphone was just here, now it's gone" is declarative, as it states a fact or opinion.
Comma. For example, pink, red, yellow and blue.
A declaritive sentence is a command.
think about it
a period ...... yup those .....
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.
A full stop.
this is an imperative sentence, as it commands or gives instruction.
The recently deceased knight had bravely faced the enormous dragon.
If the housing department doesn't condemn that building soon it's going to fall down by itself.
"Ouch, that hurts" is an exclamatory sentence because it conveys strong feelings or emotions, in this case, pain.
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?
The storm was wet and rainy as i walked outside I could feel the drops hit my coat. all i could think of
Werner Plihal has written: 'Differental effects of early and late nocturnal sleep on the consolidation of declaritive and nondeclarative memory'