Ellie, do you enjoy your school change it into imperative sentence
Answers
Answer:
Please make me as brainliest
Explanation:
Take out the garbage, please.''
''Be nice to your brother.''
''Stop your little sister from sticking peas up her nose.''
Do any of these sound familiar to you? If so, then you've heard imperative sentences before, and chances are that you've heard them quite often. Imperative sentences are commands. ''Imperative'' means of great importance, and if you are given a command, you know it's important that you get whatever it is done. For instance, you don't want to not take out the garbage when your mom tells you to, right?
How Do I Know If an Imperative Sentence Is Complete?
In order for your readers to understand what you want to say, you need to make sure that each sentence is complete. Can you remember the two very important parts of a sentence that make it complete? They include the subject (who or what the sentence is about) and the predicate (what the subject is or does in the sentence). If you are missing either of those parts, you've written an incomplete sentence.
In an imperative sentence, it is a little trickier to find the subject of the sentence if you don't know what you're doing. Let's take a look. (Yes, that's an imperative sentence too!)
''Smile for the camera.''
The simple predicate (or verb) of this sentence is ''smile,''