Classification 2 | Types of Sentence


types of sentence

 Classification 2


There are four types of sentences in this classification. Below the following:


1. Affirmative Sentences:


An affirmative sentence is a sentence that affirms that something is or does.
It can be defined as a sentence that does not contain any negative words or any expressions but contains a positive assertion
It also makes a statement. It has a subject and a predicate.
In other words, a sentence that does not negatively a statement, not a question either.

Examples: 

- You are my favorite player.
- He was peeping through the window.
- They are playing a cricket match in the playground.
- She loves her parent so much.


2. Negative Sentences:


A negative sentence is one containing a negative. Negatives are words like 'no,' 'not,' never, 'nothing.' It begins with 'not' and has a negative meaning.
In other words, a negative sentence says that something is incorrect or not true.


Examples: 

- He was not peeping through the window.
- You are not my favorite player.
- They are not playing a cricket match.
- She doesn't love her parent so much.


3. Interrogative Sentences:


An interrogative sentence is a sentence that asks a question. The term is used for sentences that are not simply questions but which also require an answer. This makes it different from an exclamation, which expresses surprise or excitement, or a statement, which makes a plain assertion.

Examples: 

- Did he meet you that day?
- Have you seen a movie lately?
- Are you not speaking English?
- Does she know the types of sentences?

4. Negative Interrogative Sentences: 


In grammar, a negative interrogative sentence is a question that uses an auxiliary verb in the present or simple past tense, such as have or did, to form the interrogative (e.g., Have you ever been to Japan? Did you ever go there?), but with a negative word such as not or never before the subject. In traditional grammar, this is an exception to the normal rule that the subject of a sentence comes before any other element (e.g., I read every day )

A negative interrogative sentence is a sentence that is negative in nature and asks a question as well. The question part usually comes at the end of the sentence, so it looks like a normal statement.


Examples: 

- Have you never been to Mumbai?
- Why did he not take the decision?
- Did you never cry?
- Have they not killed?


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