How beautiful the queen looks
Declarative sentences are in the form of a statement, end in a period and are NOT a command an exclamation or a question.
Imperative sentences are sentences that gives command and requests while exclamatory sentences are those that expresses emotions and ends with an exclamation point.
No, not necessarily a command. "Come here!" is a command. But an exclamation might indicate surprise, "You came to my party!" or strong emotion, "What a wonderful gift!"
in sentences there can be an exclamation mark in it!
No, imperative sentences do not always have periods at the end. They can end with periods, exclamation marks, or question marks depending on the tone or forcefulness of the command.
add a exclamation point
command
Command sentences are imperative sentences. Ex. Go to your room.
Interjections and exclamatory sentences are the two categories of sentences that may end with an exclamation point. Interjections express strong emotions or feelings, while exclamatory sentences convey excitement or emphasis.
You normally use an exclamation mark after a command. "Come here!" is a command.
command
A declarative sentence is a type of declaration. While a imperative sentences issues some come of command, a declarative sentence gives a statement and ends in a period. A imperative sentence can end with a period or exclamation point.