Imperative in EnglishA2
Learn how to form the imperative in English to give commands, requests, and advice correctly. Practice today for confident speaking.
What translations are available?
What modules are required?
Prerequisites
Direct commands with imperative
The imperative uses the base form of the verb to tell someone to do something. The subject is usually understood as you, so the sentence often begins with the verb itself: Sit down, Open the door, Wait here. The speaker gives a direct command, instruction, or order, and the verb stays in the base form whether the action is for one person or many. In a kitchen, a teacher, parent, coach, or boss may use this form to control an action quickly. The same pattern appears in directions and safety instructions: Turn left, Hold the railing, Cover your eyes. It is the ordinary form for direct commands in English, and it is the opposite of the statement pattern subject + verb.
| Subject | Infinitive | Conjugation | Example | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
you | to open | open | ||
you | to wait | wait | ||
you | to bring | bring | ||
you | to check | check | ||
you | to follow | follow |
A zookeeper wants the crowd to move quickly away from the cage.
(to step, imperative, you) back from the cage.
Negative imperative forms
To tell someone not to do something, use don’t + base verb: Don’t touch that, Don’t forget your keys, Don’t stand there. For stronger prohibition, use never + base verb: Never leave the stove on, Never speak to strangers about this. The negative form keeps the same implied subject you. It blocks the action instead of asking for it. In written warnings and rules, the form stays direct: Don’t enter, Don’t feed the animals, Never run in the hallway. With imperatives, the negative form is the usual way to forbid an action, while a structure like Conditional may describe what happens if someone ignores the rule.
| Subject | Infinitive | Conjugation | Example | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
you | to touch | do not touch | ||
you | to forget | do not forget | ||
you | to run | do not run | ||
you | to be late | do not be late | ||
you | to never leave | never leave |
A careful baker wants to stop anyone from touching the hot tray.
(Don’t / Doesn’t / Not) touch the hot tray.
Polite requests with please
Please makes an imperative sound softer: Please close the window, Please wait outside, Please send me the file. The grammar does not change. The sentence is still an imperative with the base verb, but please adds politeness. Tone also matters. A calm, rising tone can make a command sound like a request, especially in face-to-face conversation. Please often appears at the beginning or end of the sentence, and both positions are natural: Please take a seat and Take a seat, please. In spoken English, this pattern is common when asking for help, giving instructions, or making a small request to a stranger.
| Usage | Explanation | Example | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Soft request | Use please to make a command sound more polite and less abrupt. | ||
| Helpful reminder | Use please when you want a request to feel friendly and respectful. | ||
| Urgent courtesy | Use please with a short imperative when you need polite urgency. | ||
| Written request | Use please in notes and messages to make simple instructions sound softer. |
Suggestions and invitations
Imperatives do not always sound like orders. They can also offer advice, make invitations, or suggest a good action: Take a break, Try the soup, Come with me, Join us. The speaker is not forcing the action. Instead, the imperative presents it as a useful or welcome choice. This use is common in everyday speech, signs, and casual conversation. A friend may say Have a seat or Look at this, and a host may say Help yourself or Come in. The form stays the same, but the situation changes the meaning. The same sentence can sound strict in one context and friendly in another.
Let’s and let me forms
Let’s is the usual first-person imperative for a shared suggestion: Let’s go, Let’s meet tomorrow, Let’s not wait. It includes the speaker and the listener together. The full form is let us, but let’s is the normal spoken and written form. Use it when the speaker wants joint action or a plan. Let me introduces the speaker’s own action or an offer: Let me help you, Let me check, Let me open the door. Here, the speaker asks for permission or volunteers to do something. These forms are common in friendly conversation and in Direct Speech, where the speaker’s exact words are repeated.
| Subject | Infinitive | Conjugation | Example | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
let us | to let us | let us | ||
let us | to let us | let us not | ||
let me | to let me | let me | ||
let me | to let me | let me try |
Third-person and emphatic forms
Let can also introduce permission or instruction for another person: Let him speak, Let her finish, Let them wait outside. The structure is let + object pronoun + base verb. It is used when someone gives permission, allows an action, or tells one person to allow another person to act. In formal or literary language, an emphatic imperative can use do before the base verb for force or urgency: Do sit down, Do listen, Do be careful. This do does not make the sentence negative and does not change the tense. It adds insistence, often in an urgent request, a strong invitation, or a pointed command.
| Example | Pattern | |
|---|---|---|
| Use let him, let her, or let them when you give permission or instruction about another person. | ||
| Use let me when you offer help or ask for permission to act. | ||
| Use do before the base verb to make an order sound stronger and more forceful. | ||
| Use do with a positive imperative when you want extra insistence or warmth. |
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Ya puedes dar y ajustar órdenes, pedidos y sugerencias
Ya aprendiste a usar imperatives para dar direct commands con la forma base del verbo (Sit down). También sabes hacer negativos con don’t / never, suavizar pedidos con please, y usar imperatives para sugerencias e invitaciones (Try the soup, Come with me). Además, puedes usar Let’s, Let me, Let + object + verb y la forma enfática Do + verb para expresar permisos, planes compartidos y urgencia.