In every language one can make a statement, ask a question, or tell someone else what to do. Speakers of any language can accomplish these, and many other communicative acts, including suggestions, entreaties, threats, permissions, and expressions of surprise or dismay. Many of these communicative tasks have special grammatical structures reserved for them. A typical form of a statement is declarative, that of a question is interrogative, and that of a command, advice, good wish, and entreaty is imperative. In one language, each of these may have a special syntactic construction. In another, there may be a special particle or an affix
Crystal and Davy (1969) said that similar to conversation in daily situation, each person uses diffe...
In this article, the pragmatic analysis of the interrogative sentences is classified within the fram...
Various ways of encoding information about whether a clause is declarative, interrogative, exclamati...
“Declarative,” “interrogative,” and “imperative” are grammatical labels, while “statement,” “command...
There are at least four senses in which one can talk about clause or sentence types in a language. O...
In every language one can make a statement, ask a question or tell someone what to do. This is the e...
1 Marking clause type at the syntax/semantics interface A fundamental concept in the description of ...
This paper examines two types of expressions that seem to exist in all lan-guages, demonstratives an...
Sentences by mode can be divided into three: sentence (declarative), interrogative, and command (imp...
This paper examines two types of expressions that seem to exist in all languages, demonstratives and...
This paper explores the relation between interrogative, a category of grammatical form, and question...
An imperative is a grammatical form that is specialized to elicit a behavior from the addressee. Imp...
Imperatives constitute one of the major clause types of human language; most if not all languages h...
Before talking about conditionalized imperatives, I want to ensure a common un-derstanding of ‘imper...
The questions of functioning of the interrogative sentence as a language means with a phatic functio...
Crystal and Davy (1969) said that similar to conversation in daily situation, each person uses diffe...
In this article, the pragmatic analysis of the interrogative sentences is classified within the fram...
Various ways of encoding information about whether a clause is declarative, interrogative, exclamati...
“Declarative,” “interrogative,” and “imperative” are grammatical labels, while “statement,” “command...
There are at least four senses in which one can talk about clause or sentence types in a language. O...
In every language one can make a statement, ask a question or tell someone what to do. This is the e...
1 Marking clause type at the syntax/semantics interface A fundamental concept in the description of ...
This paper examines two types of expressions that seem to exist in all lan-guages, demonstratives an...
Sentences by mode can be divided into three: sentence (declarative), interrogative, and command (imp...
This paper examines two types of expressions that seem to exist in all languages, demonstratives and...
This paper explores the relation between interrogative, a category of grammatical form, and question...
An imperative is a grammatical form that is specialized to elicit a behavior from the addressee. Imp...
Imperatives constitute one of the major clause types of human language; most if not all languages h...
Before talking about conditionalized imperatives, I want to ensure a common un-derstanding of ‘imper...
The questions of functioning of the interrogative sentence as a language means with a phatic functio...
Crystal and Davy (1969) said that similar to conversation in daily situation, each person uses diffe...
In this article, the pragmatic analysis of the interrogative sentences is classified within the fram...
Various ways of encoding information about whether a clause is declarative, interrogative, exclamati...