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Discover LudwigThe term "imperative sentence" is correct and commonly used in written English.
It refers to a type of sentence that gives a command, request, or instruction. You can use the term "imperative sentence" when discussing different sentence types or when analyzing the structure and tone of a sentence. For example: - "Please turn off the lights before you leave." (imperative sentence) - "I think you should turn off the lights before you leave." (not an imperative sentence) - "The speaker used a lot of imperative sentences to give directions to the audience."
Exact(8)
When an imperative sentence is deduced the program takes a corresponding action.
You're tempted to think that her instructions for making elderflower gin ("Close the jar and shake it every day for 1 week") derive less from necessity than from appreciation for the perfect Anglo-Saxon imperative sentence.
In The Language of Morals (1952), Richard M. Hare (born 1919) agreed that in making moral judgments we are not primarily seeking to describe anything, but claimed that neither are we simply expressing our attitudes; instead, he suggested that moral judgments prescribe that is, are a form of imperative sentence (see prescriptivism).
For example: the descriptive sentence in (P1) has quite narrow descriptive content, namely, that the speaker approves of the particular object or act to which she is referring; the imperative sentence has especially direct emotive force, strongly commanding one's audience to have similar favorable attitudes; and both sentences are, of course, about attitudes.
Similarly, as a second-person imperative sentence, 'Do so as well' is passively disposed, Stevenson thinks, to be used by a speaker or writer who desires her audience either to share her favorable attitude or to engage in the particular kind of behavior demonstrated, and is actively disposed to effect that particular attitude or behavior of a hearer or reader.
He seized the moral authority with his grammar and demeanor: "Pass this jobs bill" is an imperative sentence; it attributes authority to the speaker.
Similar(52)
These conclusions will be either declarative or imperative sentences.
In his work on ethics, Toulmin was concerned with describing prescriptive language that is, imperative sentences and value judgments used for ethical statements while holding that ethics, or the logical study of moral language, cannot be reduced to subjective or objective facts but is a unique expression of duty or right.
Most students use the past tense when they write about their experiment in the No Template condition, but half switch to using imperative sentences or a 'command' style in the Template condition.
In his first published article, "Imperative Sentences" (1949), in his essay "Practical Reason" entered for the T.H. Green Moral Philosophy prize in 1950, and in his first book, The Language of Morals (1952), he explored the possibilities of inferring imperative conclusions from imperative, or a combination of imperative and indicative, premises.
Table 1 Contrasts between 高興 gāoxìng 'happy' and 快樂 kuàilè 'happy; joyful; cheerful' Word Collocation Sentential object -le Wish sentences Evaluational sentences Imperative sentences 高興 gāoxìng 'happy' 280 20 (7.1%) 2 (0.7%) – 5 (1.8%) 3 (1.1%) 快樂 kuàilè 'happy; joyful; cheerful' 365 – – 8 (2.2%) – –.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com