English, asked by Saswatsahoo2163, 1 year ago

Assertive, interrogative, imperative, exclamatory sentence of wisdom

Answers

Answered by Aryushsinh
0

Answer:

assertive :-

Wisdom is better than knowledge .

interrogative :-

Is it true that old age brings wisdom ?

imperative :-

Be wisdom

exclamatory :-

What a great power of wisdom is !

Answered by kamlesh678
3

Answer:

Four Kind of sentences with Wisdom are -

(1) Assertive - Wisdom is a great power.

(2) Interrogative - Isn't wisdom a great power.

(3) Imperative - Don't let you wisdom finish.

(4) Exclamatory - What a great power wisdom is !

Explanation:

Definitions :-

Assertive : An assertive sentence is a sentence that states a fact. Such sentences are simple statements. They state, assert, or declare something. They are also called declarative sentences. Assertive sentences usually end with a period or full stop.

Interrogative :- An interrogative sentence is a sentence that asks a question. Interrogative sentences can be direct or indirect, begin with or without pronouns, and feature yes/no interrogatives, alternative questions, or tag questions. Interrogative sentences often start with interrogative pronouns and end with a question mark.

Imperative  : An imperative sentence is a sentence that expresses a direct command, request, invitations, warning, or instruction. Imperative sentences do not have a subject; instead, a directive is given to an implied second person.

Exclamatory : An exclamatory sentence, also known as an exclamation sentence or an exclamative clause, is a statement that expresses strong emotion. Typically, in English grammar, an exclamatory sentence ends with an exclamation mark—also called an exclamation point

#SPJ3

Similar questions