No, because that is a phrase, and not a sentence.
That is the correct spelling of "imperative" (vital, necessary).
Use "the position for which I applied." Never end a sentence with a preposition.
The imperative is used to give a command, that it, tell someone to do something.
This is very imperative information. This is one of many examples for sentence use.
imperative
That is the correct spelling of "imperative" (vital, necessary).
Yes
Use "the position for which I applied." Never end a sentence with a preposition.
An imperative sentence.Shout loudly!
The imperative is used to give a command, that it, tell someone to do something.
It is imperative that you find this out yourself. OR As nuclear weapons proliferate, preventing war becomes imperative. The requests grew more and more imperative. Does that help?
This is very imperative information. This is one of many examples for sentence use.
only if it is imperative and has a comma between the two words.
Sorry, there is no correct position to get you pregnant. Yes... all positions are correct.
In a declarative statement, you initialize the object. But in an imperative statement, you use a preexisting statement and use it.
Position the finger of both hands on the right keys on the keyboard
You can use find as a imperative because you can say find me that dog, and find me right now there are many many more ways