It hurts just here.
This has happened before.
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Question
wh: Where does it hurt?
yes/no: Has this happened before?
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19 The imperative
1 Form
The imperative form is the base form of the verb. It is a second-person form. When I say “Come in”, I mean that you should come in. The negative is “do not/don't + base form”, and for emphasis we use “do + base form.
Positive
Negative
Emphatic
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Read the instructions carefully.
Come in.
Do not remove this book from the library.
Don't make so much fuss.
Do be careful.
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NOTE
We can use other negative words with the imperative.
Never touch electrical equipment with wet hands.
Leave no litter.
2 Use
1 The basic use of the imperative is to give orders, to get someone to do something. The speaker expects that the hearer will obey.
Teacher (to pupils): Get out your books, please.
Doctor (to patient): Just keep still a moment.
Boss (to employee): Don't tell anyone about this.
Traffic sign: Stop.
A practical guide to English grammar 20
2 But an imperative can sound abrupt. There are other ways of expressing orders.
I want you to just keep still a moment.
You must hand the work in by the weekend.
You mustn't tell anyone about this.
We often make an order less abrupt by expressing it as a request in question form.
Can you get out your books, please?
Could you just keep still a moment?
It is generally safer to use a request form, but the imperative can be used informally between equals.
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