Yes. Well written questions are sentences. If you are talking about using the words all by themselves, then context comes into play. I would argue that, without any context at all, this: 'Who?' is not a question. But in context like this: John said "Someone brought a casserole to share with us for lunch." "Who?" Mary replied. I would argue that the predicate is understood, and 'who' is a sentence.
This is a holding question for questions about the Intel 8085 microprocessor that are not written in complete sentences. Please do not split them out unless you are going to reword them or merge them into another question.
The use of complete sentences to ask questions will receive complete answers, occasionally.
Please phrase all of your questions in complete sentences. Thank you.
Please phrase all of your questions in complete sentences. Thank you.
I recommend checking your grammar, because most people need complete logical sentences to answer questions.
Part sentences with questionable spelling are very hard to answer. Please check the spelling of the machine you want help with. Please ask questions in complete sentences
Sentences that are questions are called interrogative sentences. These sentences are typically used to ask for information, seek clarification, or prompt a response.
To ask questions with complete sentences. Jetsam (noun) Jettison (verb)
sentences
Complete theses sentences to indentify the types of interfaces
Questions. Questions end with a question mark. Sentences that are a question usually start with Who, What, Why, Where, When, How, Will, and Is.Examples:What types of sentences end in a question mark?Who is the muffin man?
Questions. Interrogative sentences use question marks .