Answer:
Imperative
Explanation:
Any time a command is given and the subject is understood to be you, the sentence is imperative.
HTH
This would be the claim: To improve our economy, it is imperative that the United States push its citizens to become more literate.
A claim is a subject that would be argued, and this would be an example of something that can be argued.
No, the correct answer is not C. C should be punctuated with a period at the end. "I was wondering if you will be able to make it to my party." Indirect questions with like "I wonder if..." are written as statements although in informal texts or questions it is becoming more common to see a question mark.
The question that is correctly punctuated is "Can you come to my party or not?" We use a comma before conjunctions like or, and or but when we are linking two independent clauses like "I can come to your party, or I can go to James' party." However, we don't need one here between the two options as or not is not an independent clause.
The second question needs a question mark not a comma in the middle. "Didn't I tell you I could not come to your party? I could have sworn that I did."
C-A resume dose not need to be 100% accurate
The rapidly-developing coronavirus crisis is dominating global headlines and altering life as we know it. Many schools worldwide have closed. In the United States alone, 55 million students are rapidly adjusting to learning and socializing remotely, spending more time with family, and sacrificing comfort and convenience for the greater good.
For this week’s roundup of student comments on our writing prompts, it was only fitting to ask teenagers to react to various dimensions of this unprecedented situation: how the coronavirus outbreak is affecting their daily lives, how we can all help one another during the crisis and what thoughts or stories the term “social distancing” conjures for them.
Every week, we shout out new schools who have commented on our writing prompts. This week, perhaps because of many districts’ move to remote online learning, we had nearly 90 new classes join us from around the world. Welcome to the conversation to students from: