Declarative Sentences | MCQs
-
A. Imperative
-
B. Declarative
-
C. Optative
-
D. None of these
Explanation
A declarative sentence states a fact or opinion — here, the speaker is stating where the keys were found.
It ends with a full stop (period).
-
A. None of these
-
B. Declarative Sentence
-
C. Complex Sentence
-
D. Interrogative Sentence
Explanation
A declarative sentence is used to make a statement or express an opinion.
It ends with a period (full stop).
It is the most common type of sentence.
-
A. None of these
-
B. Optative
-
C. Imperative
-
D. Declarative
Explanation
A declarative sentence states a fact or gives information, like this one about someone learning a language.
It ends with a full stop.
It does not express a command, wish, or question.
-
A. Compound
-
B. Negative
-
C. Simple
-
D. Complex
Explanation
"I don’t want to go." is a negative sentence indicated by the "don't"
Negative sentence examples include statements of things that are false.
In English, we create negative sentences by adding the word 'not' after the auxiliary, or helping, verb.
-
A. Simple
-
B. Compound
-
C. None of these
-
D. Complex
Explanation
" We could see the moon." is simple sentence.
Because it has only one clause, one finite verb and no conjunction.
-
A. Compound
-
B. Simple
-
C. Interrogative
-
D. None of these
Explanation
"I write an essay" is a simple sentence
'I' is always a subject.
write is a verb
A simple sentence contains a subject and a verb and expresses a complete thought.
✅ Correct: 0 |
❌ Wrong: 0 |
📊 Total Attempted: 0