Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Hotel franchise - Who has the strength to relieve this sleepiness? How to turn rhetorical questions into declarative sentences?

Who has the strength to relieve this sleepiness? How to turn rhetorical questions into declarative sentences?

Disclaimer: No one has the strength to lift this big card.

Rhetorical questions become declarative sentences: the original sentence-interrogative words (how can you not)-modal particles (? ; Really? )-question mark+period.

Change rhetorical questions into declarative sentences, remove question marks, and remove modal particles that strengthen rhetorical questions. In the transformed declarative sentence, a negative word must be added in a proper position to keep consistent with the original rhetorical question.

For example, "does he admit that people's correct thoughts fell from the sky?" To put it another way: "He doesn't admit that people's correct thoughts fell from the sky." He admitted that people's correct ideas did not fall from the sky. It is inconsistent with the meaning of the original rhetorical question, and the answer is wrong, because the negative word "bu" is put in the wrong position.

Similarly, when an affirmative sentence becomes a rhetorical question, a negative word must be added in an appropriate place in the converted rhetorical question to be consistent with the original sentence. For example, "You should go and see him." "Aren't you supposed to see him?"

Classification of declarative sentences:

Declarative sentences are divided into affirmative sentences and negative sentences (complete negation and semi-negation)

First, affirmative sentences:

My son is the concern of my life.

Second, negative sentences:

1, a general negative sentence.

That is, sentences containing negative words such as "no, no, not at all, not at all".

2. Double negation.

Sentences containing two negative words, such as "no" ... no …… "and" must …… ".

I must do my homework every afternoon.

Double negative says yes.