Yes. Here are some examples:
I know you work for the FBI, but I don't know exactly what you do.
How do you do?
What do you do?
A period (.) at the end of a sentence indicates the end of a statement or sentence in written language. It helps to signal a pause and a completion of a thought.
There is a period at the end of the sentence.
You would end a sentence with "too" when indicating "also" or "in addition". You would end a sentence with "to" when indicating direction or purpose.
In proper English usage you do not end a sentence in a preposition, so at should not end the sentence Where is Jasmine is sufficient.
end is the noun in the sentence
A period is a dot (.) that signifies the end of a sentence.
You can use a period (.), an exclamation mark (!), or a question mark (?) to end a sentence.
A period (.), a question mark (?), or an exclamation point (!) signal the end of a sentence.
If the sentence is a statement it has to end in a period. If it is a question it would end in a question mark (?) and if the sentence indicates stong feeling it would end in an exclamation mark (!)
Yes. There is no English word that cannot end a sentence.
A preposition is not a good thing to end a sentence with.
No, it's a noun. Incidentally, "end of the week" is not a sentence, it is a phrase.