GuideFoot - Learn Together, Grow Smarter. Logo

In English / Middle School | 2014-09-03

Identify the sentence type: declarative, command, interrogative, or exclamatory.

"He has ten fingers and ten toes."

Asked by Kingcade9301

Answer (3)

Declarative, it makes a statement.

Answered by TaylorBayley | 2024-06-10

The sentence 'He has ten fingers and ten toes.' is a declarative sentence used to state a fact. The number ten is a whole number that falls between nine and eleven and can be represented by holding up all fingers and digits on both hands.
The sentence 'He has ten fingers and ten toes.' is a declarative sentence. A declarative sentence makes a statement and ends with a period. It is used to convey information or state a fact. Other sentence types include interrogative sentences, which ask questions; imperative sentences, which give commands; and exclamatory sentences, which express strong emotion. Examples of these are:

Interrogative: 'Didn't Count Dracula say that once?'
Imperative: 'Listen!'
Exclamatory: 'What music those children make!'

In mathematics, the number ten is the whole number between nine and eleven. It can be represented by holding up ten fingers or digits, which would be five on one hand and five on the other. Similarly, the concepts of four and five fingers can be used to explain the numbers four and five, respectively.

Answered by qwpink | 2024-06-24

The sentence 'He has ten fingers and ten toes.' is a declarative sentence that states a fact. Declarative sentences provide information and always end with a period. Unlike other sentence types such as interrogative, imperative, and exclamatory, a declarative sentence does not ask a question, give a command, or express emotion.
;

Answered by qwpink | 2025-01-12