What Is the Imperative Mood? | Definition & Examples
The imperative mood is a verb form used to give commands, instructions, or advice.
In English, there are three grammatical moods: indicative mood, imperative mood, and subjunctive mood.
In imperative sentences, a second-person subject (i.e., โyouโ) is typically implied but not directly stated.
Eat your dinner.
Donโt go in there!
What is the imperative mood?
Every sentence has a grammatical mood, which describes the sentenceโs attitude and intention. The imperative mood is one of three possible grammatical moods in English.
| Grammatical mood | Function | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Indicative | State a fact
Express a condition Ask a question |
Jin likes roses.
If it rains, we will move inside. Where do I turn? |
| Imperative | Make a demand or suggestion | Stop that! |
| Subjunctive | Describe a hypothetical scenario
Express a demand, suggestion, or wish |
If I were rich, I would buy a mansion.
I suggest that Ellen resign. |
Using the imperative mood
The imperative mood is used to give warnings or make suggestions or demands. It is commonly used on road signs, in recipes and instruction manuals, in GPS navigation directions, and when giving advice or instructions to another person or to a virtual or AI tool.
In the imperative mood, verbs do not follow subject-verb agreement. Rather, the infinitive form of the verb is used (e.g., โgo,โ โwatchโ). The implied subject of imperative sentences is the second-person pronoun โyou.โ The pronoun is rarely included in the sentence, though.
Imperative sentences often end with an exclamation point to highlight the strength of the demand. Exclamation points are not required, though, and can sometimes make a command seem too forceful for the context.
Dice the onions.
At the light, turn right.
Remind me to mail that package tomorrow.
In certain contexts, imperative mood sentences may seem overly direct or rude (e.g., โMake these corrections by Fridayโ).There are several ways to soften imperative statements. For example, the word โpleaseโ can be added to the beginning of the statement.To soften the tone even further, the imperative statement can be rephrased as a question using a modal verb (e.g., โcould,โ โwouldโ).
- Please make these corrections by Friday.
- Could you make these corrections by Friday, please?
- Could you please make these corrections by Friday?
Negative imperative statements
In the imperative mood, negative constructions are formed by placing โdo notโ (or the contraction โdonโtโ) before the imperative verb.
Do not eat the purple berries.
First-person plural imperatives
First-person plural imperatives are used when suggesting that both the speaker and their audience perform an action. They are formed using the imperative verb and a combination of the verb โletโ and the first-person plural object pronoun โusโ (i.e., โlet usโ or โletโs).
Let us pray.
Negative first-person plural imperatives can be formed by placing the adverb โnotโ between โlet usโ or โletโsโ and the imperative verb.
Letโs not end the night yet.
โLet usโ is a very formal construction. Typically, โletโsโ is used in everyday speech and writing. โLet usโ appears more in religious or historical contexts.
Imperative mood and reflexive pronouns
Because the implied subject of imperative sentences is โyou,โ the only reflexive pronouns used are โyourselfโ (singular) and โyourselvesโ (plural). The object form (e.g., โme,โ โus,โ โher,โ โhim,โ โitโ) of all other pronouns is used.
- Call Andrew or myself.
- Call Andrew or me.
- Stop being so hard on you.
- Stop being so hard on yourself.
Imperative vs indicative statements
Imperative statements give a command or make a suggestion, while indicative statements state a fact.
The imperative form of most verbs (e.g., โmakeโ) is the same as the second-person present indicative form (e.g., โyou makeโ). The verb โbeโ is an exception; the infinitive form โbeโ is used in the imperative, while โareโ is used in the indicative.
Most imperative sentences can be changed to indicative by including the second-person pronoun. For sentences that use โbe,โ the form of the verb must also be changed.
You eat quickly.
Be quiet.
You are quiet.
Frequently asked questions about the imperative mood
- What is the subject of an imperative sentence?
-
Imperative sentences have an implied (or understood) subject, the second-person pronoun โyou.โ This pronoun is rarely stated in the sentence (e.g., โTake the trash outโ).
The verb form for imperative sentences is the infinitive (e.g., โgo,โ โbe,โ โwalkโ).
- What is the imperative used for?
-
The imperative mood is used to tell somebody what to do. This includes the following:
- Warnings (e.g., โDo not enterโ)
- Instructions or directions (e.g., โChoose the best answerโ or โTurn left hereโ)
- Advice (e.g., โWear the black shoes instead of the brown onesโ)
- Commands (e.g., โHalt!โ)
- Requests (e.g., โPlease save me a seatโ)
- What is an imperative verb?
-
The imperative mood is a verb form used to express a command, instructions, or advice.
Verbs in the imperative mood use the infinitive form (e.g., โbuy some parsleyโ). The implied subject of an imperative sentence is โyou,โ the second-person pronoun. However, the pronoun is not typically included in the sentence.
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Anderson Hewitt, K. (2025, December 30). What Is the Imperative Mood? | Definition & Examples. Quillbot. Retrieved April 10, 2026, from https://quill.cosmictools.in/blog/verbs/imperative-mood/