The document defines and provides examples of the four types of sentences in English: declarative sentences make statements, interrogative sentences ask questions, imperative sentences give commands, and exclamative sentences express strong emotions. Declarative sentences typically use subject-verb word order and end with a period, while interrogative sentences use wh-word-auxiliary-subject-verb order and end with a question mark. Imperative sentences usually contain only a base verb and end with a period or exclamation point, with the subject implied as "you." Exclamative sentences contain what or how at the beginning and end with an exclamation point.
The document defines and provides examples of the four types of sentences in English: declarative sentences make statements, interrogative sentences ask questions, imperative sentences give commands, and exclamative sentences express strong emotions. Declarative sentences typically use subject-verb word order and end with a period, while interrogative sentences use wh-word-auxiliary-subject-verb order and end with a question mark. Imperative sentences usually contain only a base verb and end with a period or exclamation point, with the subject implied as "you." Exclamative sentences contain what or how at the beginning and end with an exclamation point.
The document defines and provides examples of the four types of sentences in English: declarative sentences make statements, interrogative sentences ask questions, imperative sentences give commands, and exclamative sentences express strong emotions. Declarative sentences typically use subject-verb word order and end with a period, while interrogative sentences use wh-word-auxiliary-subject-verb order and end with a question mark. Imperative sentences usually contain only a base verb and end with a period or exclamation point, with the subject implied as "you." Exclamative sentences contain what or how at the beginning and end with an exclamation point.