Yes, you can. Follow these steps to browse answered questions by category.
In the "browse unanswered questions" section or type in the category that you want to answer questions about in the Answer section on the top under Ask. Thanks!
When on the category home page (not the category topic page) you should see all the answered questions. To get to the unanswered questions in the category there is a link to unanswered questions above the name of the category. If you are not seeing a list of questions you probably are looking at the topic page instead of the category homepage and will need to use the browse categories page to get to the category homepage instead.
Click "Browse Categories" on the left under Site Tools, and then search for an Animal Category. In that category, click "Unanswered questions" and you will be taken to a list of all the Unanswered questions in that category.
Go to Browse Categories. Choose a category. Scroll down. On the left, there is a link Unanswered. Click that and it will show only unanswered questions (unless someone just answered it).
You may browse for a certain category (In the blue field on the left side of this screen), then scroll through unanswered or answered questions in that category.
You can find unanswered questions by going to the top of the Answers website, clicking "Ask" and then on the right side clicking Unanswered Questions. Then browse to the category that you want (Biology).
You can view unanswered questions in Cars and Vehicles. Make sure you are signed into your account. Then go on the left sidebar "Browse Categories" and search for that category. In the top left will be an option to filter "Answered" or "Unanswered" questions.
On practically any page on WikiAnswers, go to the large green box that asks the contributor to "Enter a question or phrase..." At the bottom of this box, click on the link entitled "Unanswered questions." From here, choosing any category or subcategory will display a list of all the unanswered questions in that category or subcategory.Another method to track down unanswered questions:Click on "WikiAnswers.com" above the blue box where you ask a question. Click on "Unanswered questions." In the box entitled "Find a Category," type in the category or sub-category you are searching for. A find-as-you-type drop-down box will display a list of categories. Click on the category of your choice, and then click "Go."== ==In each category there is a list of answered and unanswered questions. Also the main page says Browse: then unanswered questions as the first choice. This can be found right under the place you type in your question.To find a category, you can go to browse categories on the bar on the left side of the screen. Then when you pick a category you will find a place where it says "all unaswered questions."Click on the blue Answer tab on the Ask/Answer bar above. Click either Browse unanswered quesions or Most-recent questions. Either of them will show you questions that still need answers.
You can find unanswered questions by going to the top of the Answers website, clicking "Ask" and then on the right side clicking Unanswered Questions. Then browse to the category that you want (Biology).
Well, a question that has not been answered. The suffix un- means not. Therefore, unanswered means not answered. Such as, he asked me a question, and I did not answer it so it remained unanswered. Happy to help!
To find unanswered questions about the Jonas Brothers, go to the Jonas Brothers category (you can get there through the "Browse categories" or "Categories" links, or go to answers.com/Q/FAQ/3547 in your browser). Once you are in the category, there will be a little "Unanswered" link in the upper left, right above the name of the category. If you click that link, you will see all the unanswered questions we have in that category.
By selecting "Browse categories" on the left side of the screen in the blue field, "Animal Life" (or any category) can be selected. Once you are on that particular category's home page, you may select "answered" or "unanswered" questions.