It can be used in an imperative sense, but it is the usethat is critical, not the verb. Many verbs can be meaningfully used in imperative sentences. Compare: Whenever I walk along Narragansett Beach, I find interesting pebbles and shells. and: Find your money now, son, or you will not be able to buy your ticket.
Usually, when the subject of the sentence is you (understood, not written or spoken), the sentence is an imperative. In Find your money now... it is understood or implied that the subject is 'You'.
"Imperative" is a sophisticated term for a bossy verb.
Improve.
"Listen" can be a verb, imperative verb, or a noun depending on context. Verb: He listens to his parents. Imperative verb: Listen to me, Bob! Noun: I gave a listen to the speech.
Leave can be used to make an imperative sentence, by itself leave is not imperative. Leave now!
Yes, an imperative sentence typically begins with a verb to give a command, instruction, or request. It is direct and does not usually include a subject.
"Imperative" is a sophisticated term for a bossy verb.
Wish is not an imperative verb. Wish is a verb and can be used in an imperative sentence. Wish for whatever you like. Imperative sentences have no subject the subject is implied (you) eg Stand up -- You stand up Many verbs can be used in imperative sentences
"Listen" can be a verb, imperative verb, or a noun depending on context. Verb: He listens to his parents. Imperative verb: Listen to me, Bob! Noun: I gave a listen to the speech.
A "bossy" verb is an imperative verb, a word that tells someone what to do.A sentence with a "bossy" verb is an imperative sentence.Examples of imperative sentences with a "bossy" verb:Stop!Watch this!Clean your room.Bill, get some milk on your way home.Note: The subject of an imperative sentence is most often the implied noun or pronoun for the person spoken to.
Improve.
No, they are not the same. A modal verb is used before the main verb for extra information, for example: 'I have seen him'. An imperative verb displays an instruction or a command, for example: 'Pour 100ml of water into a cup'.
"Listen" can be a verb, imperative verb, or a noun depending on context. Verb: He listens to his parents. Imperative verb: Listen to me, Bob! Noun: I gave a listen to the speech.
Hand it over!
imperative
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Imperative A+
Leave can be used to make an imperative sentence, by itself leave is not imperative. Leave now!