Are you sure captain? "affirmative" , said the captain.
The word 'Suppose' seems to be non-affirmative because it is an assumption, and not a confirmation of whatever is being said or described.
Affirmative Action
vcv
confirmative, approving, supporting, confirming
agreeing, assenting, concurring, confirming, positive
An affirmative sentence is a sentence which affirms a proposition.
An affirmative sentence is a sentence which affirms a proposition.
Affirmative action is about farming
An affirmative sentence simply states a fact or opinion, while an assertive sentence is more forceful in making a statement or claim. Assertive sentences are more confident or assertive in their tone compared to affirmative sentences.
His action was justified.
When I asked if he had been drinking, he only nodded in the affirmative. "Affirmative Action" is a social program. When I asked if he was ready, he gave me an affirmative response.
assertive - This word describes a sentence that declares your belief.eg The Earth is flat.eg I believe the Earth is flat.affirmative - This commonly means a sentence that is not negative.eg affirmative - The Earth is flat.eg negative - The Earth is not flat.Imperative - This means a sentence that is worded as an order,eg Look at how flat the Earth is!
I will is an affirmative action, as in you are going to do it. e.g. I will eat the cake, I will go out, I will etc..
"What is in ...?" is "qu'y a-t-il dans ...?" in French. In an affirmative sentence, it is "Ce qu'il y a dans ...".
To change an affirmative sentence to a negative one, you typically add the word "not" after the auxiliary verb (e.g., "I am" becomes "I am not"). If there is no auxiliary verb in the sentence, you use the verb "do/does" as the auxiliary (e.g., "She eats" becomes "She does not eat"). Always make sure to maintain the correct subject-verb agreement when forming negative sentences.
Our launch status was affirmative and our plane was able to take off.
No, except at the beginning of a sentence because it is n ot a proper n ou n.