16. Do not cross the road now. which sentence
Answers
Answered by
3
Explanation:
Imperative sentence here it's command or request
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Answered by
0
Answer:
Do not cross the road now.-
This given sentence is an imperative sentence or imperative.
Explanation:
- Whenever a demand or command is reflected, it is defined as an imperative sentence.
- In English, an imperative sentence refers to the kind of imperative mood that expresses a primary order, direct command, wish, request, assignations, warning, or instruction.
- Such sentences are how we communicate with things & with others when we need it to do.
- Imperative rulings don't possess a subject; rather, a directive is given to an inferred second person to perform something.
- For example, Stop moving in circles!- expresses a command and it is given to the implied second person to stop moving in circles.
- While an affirmative sentence tells its reader to take a specific action, a negative imperative sentence tells its readers not to do something or forbids to do.
Therefore more precisely, the above-mentioned sentence is a (negative) imperative sentence.
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