Do we say "Thanks, Henry.' or 'Thank Henry'?

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tulipflower

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Which sentence is grammatical? "Thanks, Henry.' or 'Thank Henry'?
 
The first. The second is an imperative.
 
Which one is acceptable if we want to thank somebody?
 
Which sentence is grammatical? "Thanks, Henry.' or 'Thank Henry'?

NOT A TEACHER

Henry: Here is the book that I promised to give you today.
Mona: Thanks, Henry. I can always depend on you.

Raul: I have an extra donut. Would you like it?
Mona: Thank you.
Raul: Thank Henry. He's the one who bought the donuts and gave me five. I was able to eat only four of them.
 
The first is correct, but it's not a sentence.

Right.

I don't agree. It begins with a capital letter, ends with a full stop, and is a complete, self-contained sense unit.

Rover_KE obviously meant that it's not a grammatical sentence, not that there's no capital letter or full stop.
 
Haven't we had this debate before? I mean the debate about what constitutes a sentence. For me "Thanks, Henry" is a sentence. So is "Yes". Perhaps I am misunderstanding the exchange in posts 9 and 10.
 
For whatever it may be worth, it's interesting, I think, to compare the grammar of "Thank Henry" ("[You] thank Henry") with that of "Thank you" (" thank you") and "Thank God," which, as I analyze it, is the active-voice equivalent of the passive subjunctive "God be thanked." (Footnote: I parse "Thank God" the same way as I parse "F*** you," which, it should be noted, does not have the reflexive pronoun "yourself.") Initially, when I saw "Thank Henry," I thought it was a play on "Thank God": "(May) Henry be thanked." :)
 
Haven't we had this debate before? I mean the debate about what constitutes a sentence. For me "Thanks, Henry" is a sentence.

It's very simple, really—there are two very different ways to define what a sentence is.

Grammatically, Thanks, Henry is not a sentence because it lacks the necessary grammatical structure to be considered one by a grammarian.

In another sense, it can be considered a sentence because if included as part of a text, a writer would punctuate with a full stop before continuing to write. By this definition, a sentence is defined by punctuation rather than structure.

Those are two very different, but fairly well-defined, definitions.

For me, it was obvious which one Rover_KE was using in post #6 because I had exactly the same reaction as he.
 
It depends on which grammarian you choose.

I was referring to modern grammar (as well as semantics), which views sentences as structural units.
 
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