Imperative.
Either use a full stop "." or an exclamation mark "!", depending on the forcefulness of the command.
A declarative sentence can end in either a period or an exclamation point.
sentence that gives an order or command Examples: Give me that book! Clean your room! Do your homework. Take the dog for a walk, please. Don’t touch that! Do come to visit us whenever you’re in town. Push!
The 4 kinds of sentence according to usage:DECLARATIVE - statement (ends with period)example: The car is green.INTERROGATIVE - question (ends with question mark)example: Are you hungry?IMPERATIVE - command (may end with either a period or exclamation mark)example: Eat your vegetables.EXCLAMATORY - express strong feeling (normally ends with an exclamation point)example: Oops! What a mess! Sorry.
Either a period, a question mark or an exclamation point.
You can use either a period or an exclamation mark to end this sentence. It depends on how you are saying the sentence.
You can use either a period (.) or an exclamation point (!) because "I bet" is a complete sentence.
A exclamation mark is used at the end of a sentence or a short phrase which express very strong feelings. Here are some examples:What a lovely view you have here! :That's fantastic! :Johnny, don't touch that! :Help!
The 4 kinds of sentence according to usage:DECLARATIVE - statement (ends with period)example: The car is green.INTERROGATIVE - question (ends with question mark)example: Are you hungry?IMPERATIVE - command (may end with either a period or exclamation mark)example: Eat your vegetables.EXCLAMATORY - express strong feeling (normally ends with an exclamation point)example: Oops! What a mess! Sorry.
DECLARATIVE SENTENCE -declares or tells about a certain thing or particularly the subject - ends with a period (.) She had been a very nice friend to me.INTERROGATIVE SENTENCE - asks a question - ends with a question mark (?) Were you here yesterday?IMPERATIVE SENTENCE (COMMAND/REQUEST) - tells someone to do something, ends with either a period or a question mark (./?) - command - tells someone to do something Take the child with you and go home now. - ends with either a period or question mark (./?) - requesting somebody to do something Coud you lend me a ballpen? Please give her something to eat. EXCLAMATORY SENTENCE - something said with high feelings -ends with an exclamation point (!) Hurry, they're already behind us!
The inverted exclamation point can be entered by holding down the Alt key and pressing 0161, 173 or 8877 on the number pad. In Microsoft Word, the inverted question and exclamation marks can be typed by holding down the Ctrl, Alt, and shift keys while typing a normal question or exclamation mark, or by typing either mark at the start of the sentence whilst in the Spanish language mode.