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Example sentences for "declarative"

Lexicographically close words:
declar; declaracion; declarant; declaration; declarations; declaratory; declare; declared; declaredly; declarer
  1. Others see in this an interpretation, declarative or expansive, of the law of indissolubility.

  2. The end of a declarative or an imperative sentence is marked by a period.

  3. A declarative sentence declares or asserts something as a fact.

  4. But this definition in strictness applies only to verbs in declarative sentences.

  5. But a declarative or an imperative sentence that is likewise exclamatory may be followed by an exclamation point instead of a period.

  6. If a sentence is both declarative and exclamatory, mention the fact.

  7. Declarative sentences of direct discourse are put in the accusative with the infinitive, and interrogative and imperative sentences of direct discourse are put in the subjunctive, in indirect discourse.

  8. The subject of the debate may be stated in the form of a resolution, a declarative sentence, or a question.

  9. The period is used at the close of imperative and declarative sentences.

  10. Notice that the exclamation point follows the declarative and imperative forms, but the interrogative form is followed by the question mark.

  11. The subject about which we argue may be stated in any one of the three forms discussed in Section 74; that is, as a declarative sentence, a resolution, or a question.

  12. Shall, in the second and third persons, is not simply the sign of the future tense in declarative sentences.

  13. It holds fast to the Scripture distinction between justification as a declarative act of God, and regeneration and sanctification as those efficient acts of God by which justification is accompanied and followed.

  14. Declarative and imperative sentences, when not connected in construction with what follows, are closed by periods.

  15. As we have seen, the period is used to close a declarative sentence, and the semicolon and colon are used to mark off the greater divisions of a sentence.

  16. The period marks the end of a declarative or imperative sentence.

  17. When an unemphatic interjection begins a declarative sentence, it is frequently possible to omit the exclamation point entirely.

  18. Notice that not every declarative statement is a proposition for argument.

  19. What effects have the simple, declarative sentences?

  20. The topic must be given some definite expression in a declarative sentence before any real argument is possible.

  21. A proposition in argument is a statement--a declarative sentence--concerning the truth or expediency of which there may be two opinions.

  22. Still other writers follow the declarative form of opening.

  23. But inasmuch as the declarative form lacks a little of the inherent interest of the question or the command, it should deal with some point of particular "interest value" to the class addressed.

  24. A revolution is always declarative and never creative.

  25. Right is regarded as merely declarative of might.

  26. We observe that while certain of the former might be called "statutory," the chief means and method of development was the declarative edict of the praetor and the trained labour of the jurisconsults.

  27. The source of that law was God; the Church was its declarative organ.

  28. Thus the declarative mode may be used in asking a question; as, what man is frail.

  29. An indirect question may refer to any of the five elements of a declarative sentence.

  30. In a declarative sentence also, there may be a rhetorical or poetical transposition of one or both of the terms: as, "And I thy victim now remain.

  31. He might have been better employed in explaining some of his own phraseology, such as, "the indefinite-past and present of the declarative mode.

  32. An indirect question may refer to either of the five elements of a declarative sentence.

  33. Let us recall the +Usual Order+ of words and phrases in a simple declarative sentence.

  34. The whole of a verb is not placed at the beginning of a declarative sentence except in poetry; as, Flashed all their sabers bare.

  35. Change the sentences you have written in this Lesson into declarative sentences.

  36. Footnote: What properly introduces a noun clause expressing a direct or an indirect question, but a declarative noun clause is introduced by the conjunction that.

  37. This sentence is used simply to affirm, or to declare a fact, and is called a +Declarative Sentence.

  38. A Declarative Sentence is one that is used to affirm or to deny.

  39. When a parenthesis forms the end of a declarative sentence the period is placed outside the parenthesis, as in the preceding example.

  40. The interrogation, like a certain inflection in the voice, may indicate that a sentence, though declarative in form, is really a question and requires an answer.

  41. Conflicts with the Nabataeans No like successes could be boasted of against the Nabataeans.

  42. A declarative or assertive sentence, and an imperative sentence should be followed by a period; as, Your friend gave me a book.

  43. A sentence that asserts or declares something is called a =declarative sentence=.

  44. The subject of a declarative sentence is generally placed before the predicate, but it is sometimes placed after the predicate; as, Sweet was the sound of the evening bell.

  45. It seems irrevocably fixed that in a prose declarative sentence the verb shall never stand first.

  46. To indicate the end of a declarative sentence; as, The business is prosperous.

  47. If the quotation itself is a question, although it forms part of a declarative sentence, it requires an interrogation mark before the quotation mark; as, Have you been waiting long?

  48. A dizzy precipice at the end of every declarative sentence.

  49. The issues when stated in declarative sentences are the fundamental reasons why the affirmative believes its proposition should be believed.

  50. Each reason given in support of the issues and each subreason should be no more than a simple, complete, declarative sentence.

  51. Though always spoken of in the singular, like the Bucoleon, it was a collection of palaces, vast, irregular, and declarative of the taste of the different eras they severally memorialized.

  52. Change each of the following declarative sentences into three interrogative sentences, and tell how the change was made.

  53. A Declarative Sentence is one that is used to affirm or to deny+.

  54. A statement, it should be remembered, is a declarative sentence; a term is a word or any combination of words other than a sentence.


  55. The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "declarative" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.
    Other words:
    absolute; affirmative; assertive; decided; declarative; emphatic; positive