English Language & Usage Asked by Mohammad Ahmad on August 24, 2020
Is it imperative , interrogative or what ?
A question I got online asks, ” What is the simple subject of the following sentences ?
is the sentence imperative or interrogative ?
question 17 : Will you check the tires.
using a( full stop) not a question mark.
First, is it correct or wrong to start with ( will) and ending the sentence with a full stop ?
OR perhaps it is mistyping, but it is not the only question
It is already a request ( polite command ) but how it doesn’t end in a question mark ?
It is already a request ( polite command ) but how it doesn't end in a question mark ?
Question 17 is a courtesy question, (as defined by The Chicago Manual of Style, fifteenth edition 2003), and as such does not require a question mark:
6.74 Courtesy question. A request courteously disguised as a question does not require a question mark.
[Relevant example:] Will the audience please rise.
So it is not really a question but a polite request, as you can see from the example above which takes a more or less identical form.
Reference: https://english.stackexchange.com/a/262363/187344
Is it imperative , interrogative or what ?
I think the way in which the request was 'disguised' as a question here is what confused you, but as this is a request it is imperative.
Imperative Sentences
The third type of sentence in the English language is the imperative sentence. Imperative sentences, or imperatives, make commands or requests. ... Periods and exclamation marks indicate imperative sentences in written English.
Reference - Sentence Purpose - parentingpatch.com
The way you can spot that this is imperative is that it ends in a period, and is a request for someone to do something. Whereas an interrogative sentence ends with a question mark.
Answered by Gary on August 24, 2020
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