When a sentence tells you to do something, it is typically giving a command or instruction, often referred to as an imperative sentence. These sentences usually begin with a verb and may address the listener directly, prompting action. For example, "Close the door" directs someone to perform a specific task. The tone can vary from polite requests to more forceful demands.
A sentence that tells you to do something is called a command sentence.
Yes because a declarative sentence tells you something and the sentence tells you that some crickets kegs live out doors.
That is a declarative sentence, where you have declared (stated) something.
The subject tells who or what the sentence is about.
a declarative sentence tells something and ends with a period
It tells us that someone or something is more lively or boisterous than someone or something else ... in a sentence 'we have two dogs, one friskier than the other'.
Actually it is called a declarative sentence, and it is a sentence that simply states or tells about something. It is followed with a period at the end. Example. We ate lunch at Fat Burger yesterday.
The word which tells something more about the verb, adverb (very,so), or adjective is called an ADVERB.
The subject is who or what the sentence is about.
Every sentence has a subject, what the sentence is about, and a predicate, what tells something about the subject. In this sentence, the subject is "cat" and the predicate is "content."
An adverb of time tells when, for how long or how often something has happened or will happen. For example: I went to the store yesterday tells when I did an action.
the subject is what the sentence is about