Grammar and Punctuation
They're- I hope they're going.
There- Look over there!!!!
Their- I love to read their stories.
Your- Your cat is adorable.
You're- What do you think you're doing.
To- I went to school.
Too- I went to school too.
Two- Two friends went to school.
Declarative: A declarative sentence is a statement, and it always ends with a period.
Interrogative: An interrogative sentence is a question, and it always ends with a question mark.
Imperative: An imperative sentence is a command. It makes a request or tells someone to do something, and it usually ends with a period. If the command shows strong feeling, it ends with an exclamation point.
Exclamatory: An exclamatory sentence is like a statement, but it shows surprise or strong feeling. An exclamatory sentence always ends with an exclamation point.
Subject: The complete subject tells who or what is doing something. It is the simple subject plus any other words that describe or modify it.
Predicate: The complete predicate tells what the subject is doing. It is the simple predicate plus any other words that describe or modify it.
Direct Object: A direct object is the pronoun, noun, or noun phrase that receives the action of a verb. To find the direct object in a sentence, locate the action verb and ask "what" or "whom" it is acting on.