Yes, the question is asking for your opinion. Therefore, you must answer providing your own reasoning to support your answer. It is an open-ended question.
No, the sentence "I thought so" is not an interrogative sentence. It is a declarative sentence expressing the speaker's belief or opinion. An interrogative sentence is one that asks a question.
Yes, that is a declarative sentence. It makes a statement or expresses an opinion without posing a question or giving a command.
A declarative sentence makes a statement or expresses an opinion. It typically ends with a period and is structured in a subject-verb-object format. It does not pose a question or give a command.
a sentence that states or declares something-declarative sentence.there are two types of declarative sentence-positive and negative sentence.a sentence in which question is asked-interrogative sentencea sentence in which --order is givenrequest is madesuggestions or advice is given- are imperative sentences
These are both sentence types. Interrogatives end with a question mark and are questions. Declaratives are just that: you are declaring something. Interrogative: May I go to the bathroom? Declarative: I must go to the bathroom.
There is no sentence in the question on which to base an opinion.
NO! Not only is it not a question, it's not a sentence. Can you please ask a literate question?!
No, the sentence "I thought so" is not an interrogative sentence. It is a declarative sentence expressing the speaker's belief or opinion. An interrogative sentence is one that asks a question.
From the sentence structure of this question, it seems that you find English boring as well :)
This question calls for an opinion, not an example sentence.
In the sentence "Who, in your opinion, will win the class election," the commas are used to set off the interrupter "in your opinion." This interrupts the main clause to provide additional information about the context in which the question is being asked.
This is an opinion I have an opinion My opinion is this
Begin by restating the question and stating your own opinion. Then support that with facts.
Yes, that is a declarative sentence. It makes a statement or expresses an opinion without posing a question or giving a command.
This is a declarative sentence. It is stating a fact or opinion about someone.
I can give you several sentences.It is my opinion that you could write this sentence yourself.She held a low opinion of him.What is your opinion of the painting?
In the sentence, "In your opinion the president was wrong about that." "that" is a pronoun. Its antecedent is presumably in a preceding sentence.