I believe that only DingoBot can do that. But members and supervisors can flag questions for:
To report a question that does not have enough information to be answered, simply email support @ answers.com. Or you can flag the question as "containing gibberish."
Yes - if your editing results in the flag being no longer necessary, it can be removed. For example, say you saw the question 'What is the value of Pi to ten decimal places' - and the answer had been flagged as gibberish, because someone had answered 'ten pieces of pie'. - If you were to replace that answer with the correct one of 3.1415926536, you can remove the flag - as the question no longer has a 'gibberish' answer. If the answer has multiple flags, only remove the one(s) you're correcting.
BEYOND the LIMIT of editing (improvement) of this question or to flag gibberish question. poor grammar, not formulated (seems the authors wants to gain only points by asking whatever he likes)
Your question is gibberish.
This question is GIBBERISH !
Talking about grammar, could you rephrase your question? As it is, it is gibberish.
This question is meaningless gibberish.
Yes this actually happens all of the time. Sometimes when a question is asked it is blatant nonsense or does not have enough clarification or information to be answered. You can flag it for review and a supervisor will see if it needs trashed/deleted.
The question is Gibberish.
You cannot flag an unanswered question on WikiAnswers. The "Flag" button is missing if the question does not have an answer.
Those types of flag are usually applied by 'dingobot' - the automated system that scans contributions according to a pre-set list of rules. If someone repeats the same word (or words) in their answer - the system will flag it for repetition. If someone types a sentence that appears to be either just a random jumble of letters or words - it will get flagged for gibberish. However - remember there are also real people here to rectify obvious 'mistakes' if a question is flagged in error.
The question is gibberish. You should take the same care in asking the question as you hope the answerer to do.