Nadie está en la puerta.
To transform an interrogative sentence to negative form, you can add the word "not" after the auxiliary verb. For example, change "Is he coming?" to "Is he not coming?"
To change an interrogative sentence into a negative form, you typically add "not" after the auxiliary verb. For example, "Is she coming?" would become "She is not coming."
Children should be taught by parents how to behave.
A declarative sentence can be either positive or negative in nature. A declarative sentence is simply a subject followed by a predicate. For example: I washed the car. 'I' would be the subject of the sentence and 'washed the car' is the predicate. The predicate is pretty much everything that follows the verb in English. It gets more complex if we bring in other languages. So back to our example we would negate the verb 'wash' which is in the past tense. I did not wash the car. In English we also have what we linguists like to call the "dummy do." It helps the verb to create the action. So you can also have things like: I sing. I do not sing. Which is present and habitual. Or John drives his mom's Subaru. (positive declarative habitual present) John can't drive his dad's Lexus. (negative declarative habitual present) He crashed his car. (positive declarative past) Therefore his dad won't let him drive the Lexus. (negative declarative habitual) Hope this helps.
"It was believed by me that she was the best in her group." That's a very awkward sentence.
No hay nadie en la puerta
To change a sentence into a negative form, you can add a negation word such as "not" or use a negative verb form like "is not" or "do not" depending on the context of the sentence. For example, "She is happy" can become "She is not happy."
i am not grateful to you.
You are not in Lahore.
we were not to the eats rice
To transform an interrogative sentence to negative form, you can add the word "not" after the auxiliary verb. For example, change "Is he coming?" to "Is he not coming?"
To change an interrogative sentence into a negative form, you typically add "not" after the auxiliary verb. For example, "Is she coming?" would become "She is not coming."
If you're willing to become penitent you have to change your negative traits.
My best regards,
Children should be taught by parents how to behave.
To change an affirmative sentence to a negative one, you typically add the word "not" after the auxiliary verb (e.g., "I am" becomes "I am not"). If there is no auxiliary verb in the sentence, you use the verb "do/does" as the auxiliary (e.g., "She eats" becomes "She does not eat"). Always make sure to maintain the correct subject-verb agreement when forming negative sentences.
It is not a grammatically correct sentence, if that's what you mean. You should change "lie" to "lies", or to "lied", depending on what you wanted to say.