Could be the Starry Night.
yes, Vincent Van Goff is a very significant man (significant means very important) e.g the queen is significant
A mural is a painting which was painted directly on a wall. In earlier times this was common in churches, for instance.
A sentence missing a subject or a verb is a fragment.
Vincent Thomas Bridge, San Pedro California
It is imperative that you take the cat to the vet right away, or he could die.
A declarative sentence makes a statement or provides information, while an imperative sentence gives a command or instruction. Declarative sentences usually end with a period, while imperative sentences often end with a period or exclamation mark.
Yes it is - It's a short sentence. For example someone could have said "Please stay in your seat until you are told to leave" Stay in your seat - is a more concise way of saying it.
Request are made using the modal auxiliary verbs will/can/ would/ could.Imperative sentences don't have a subject so a subject needs to be added too.Also you could use please.eg imperative sentence - Sit down!request - could you sit down please.
The simple subject of an imperative sentence is always or almost always "you", unless it has a person's name before the sentence. When one makes a tag question of an imperative. for example, the tag will include the "implied" subject prronoun--e.g., "Open the door, won't you? Occasionally, however, the implicit use of "you" is made explicit for emphasis--"You eat your breakfast, you little bum!" Most linguists would consider such structures imperative sentences, and not just because they are commands. In a sentence like "You be good!," for example, the verb has a nonfinite form, showing that "you" can appear as an overt subject, distinguishing this imperative sentence from an indicative like "You are good." The indefinite pronouns "someone" and "something" are also used as overt imperative subjects "("Someone open the door") or even implied subjects ("Open the door, won't someone?"). It is might, therefore, better to say that overt subjects in imperative sentences are optional and rare, but the notion that imperative sentences always have an implicit "you" as an unexpressed subject is good enough for school grammars, but I have seen it linguistic discussion of syntax as well, probably because theoretical linguists tend to simplify rather than discuss rare exceptions. One could, I suppose, argue that such cases actually imply "someone among you" as the subject, or as a last resort, relegate them to "pragmatics."
Yes. The imperative sentence is "Stand." The subject 'you' is implied, and the verb is 'stand' making it a complete sentence. Depending on the tone, it could use an exclamation point instead of a period.
Please do your homework regularly is an imperative sentence and has no subject but the subject (you) is implied. So to make a passive sentence from an imperative sentence you can use the subject - you. You have been told to do your homework regularly. or you could say: Let your homework be done regularly.
You cannot end a sentence with I could not. I could not anyhow. Could you? Maybe you could. Maybe someone else could. But I know I could not. Example Sentence: I know I could not.
Yes, it can be a complete sentence. Someone could say to you "You are looking well" and you could reply "As are you.".
An imperative question is a question that seems to be a command or directive, typically ending with an exclamation mark. It is often used to give instructions or make requests in an assertive and forceful manner. For example, "Could you please pass the salt!" is an imperative question.
Generally, yes it is. 'You do' is not a complete thought--usually. But if someone said, "Who cares about cheerleading anyway!", someone could answer, "You do."
There are plenty of ways you could use the word covet in a sentence. You could advise someone not to covet their neighbor for example.