Go to your room right now!
Any single word command is a simple imperative sentence. Examples: "Go!" "Stay!" "Halt!"
"Go clean your room". That is an imperative sentence because imperative means a command.
I think so, because the implied subject is you, and the verb is stop, so I think it's a sentence as You stop, is a sentence.
A imperative sentence shows a command, not a question. It is a type of sentence that gives a direct instruction or order to someone.
No, a declarative sentence is not a command. A declarative sentence is a statement that provides information or expresses a fact, opinion, or idea. In contrast, a command is an imperative sentence that gives an instruction or direction.
I command you to go do the laundry. I command you to obey my orders.
how would you use the word finished in a command sentence
I did tell you to fix that lamp so go do it now!
Yes, 'Be sure to include each word's definition', is a command sentence.
Here is an example sentence with the word 'command':You can use verbal and sign signals to command your dog to sit and stay.
sillier is an adjective, not a command. But here is an example of a command with the word
When you need a command sentence for sillier. IT can not start with word that has I in iy.
i would use the word command in a sentience like this you might say i i trained my dog to listen to me when i give her a command
A sentence that gives a command is an imperativesentence. The following sentences are imperative:Maxie, go clean your room.Stop!Go to your room.Take out the trash.imperitave ends with a period and gives a command
go get me that now.
Er, yes you can. "Die." Is simply enough as a sentence/command with the word die in it. ^_^
Any single word command is a simple imperative sentence. Examples: "Go!" "Stay!" "Halt!"