A declarative sentence needs no special punctuation, nothing more than a period at the end of it.
A declarative sentence ends with just a little-old period.
A period (.) is placed at the end of a declarative sentence.
A period (.) is placed at the end of a declarative sentence.
A declarative sentence typically ends with a period (.), which indicates a statement or assertion.
A declarative statement ends in a period. An exclamatory sentence ends in an exclamation point. To change a declarative to an exclamatory, just change the punctuation and perhaps add emphasis. There is no water at the well. (Declarative) There is no water at the well! (Exclamatory)
declarative
period at the end of the sentence
A declarative sentence ends with just a little-old period.
A period (.) is placed at the end of a declarative sentence.
A declarative sentence ends with a period.
A period (.) is placed at the end of a declarative sentence.
A declarative sentence typically ends with a period (.), which indicates a statement or assertion.
A declarative sentence can end in either a period or an exclamation point.
A declarative statement ends in a period. An exclamatory sentence ends in an exclamation point. To change a declarative to an exclamatory, just change the punctuation and perhaps add emphasis. There is no water at the well. (Declarative) There is no water at the well! (Exclamatory)
A period at the end is the only punctuation in most cases. It is a declarative sentence.
A declarative sentence should end with an exclamation mark when the speaker wants to convey strong emotion or emphasis. This punctuation choice can indicate excitement, urgency, surprise, or importance in the statement being made.
To change a declarative sentence into a question, you can typically add a question word (who, what, when, where, why, how) at the beginning of the sentence, invert the subject and the verb, or add a question mark at the end.