Not at all: if regularly introduces a conditional clause, with no implication of any question.
Rudyard Kipling's poem If doesn't ask any questions; it is a series of statements.
Rhetorical questions engage the audience by prompting them to think about the topic being discussed. They can help to reinforce the speaker's point by leading the audience to a desired conclusion or by sparking reflection on the subject. By posing questions that imply the answer, the speaker can guide the audience to consider certain perspectives or ideas.
You can use "silly" in a question to imply a playful or light-hearted tone. For example: "Isn't it silly how cats always seem to find the most awkward places to nap?"
Incomplete question....
Saying no would imply that the answer is yes, and so that would imply the answer is no. And that would go on forever.It is like saying "this sentence is false."by stating the sentence you are saying it is true.
Because otherwise you are using figures which imply an accuracy that cannot be justified.
This question is absolutely unclear. Please resate, as I have no idea to what you are alluding.
To imply means to involve by reference or association
"Are you dead?"
There is a phrase "accident prone" which may or not imply clumsiness.
The laws of thermodynamics imply that there will always be some loss of efficiency.
The flashbacks that Holden has about Jane in Catcher in the Rye imply that Jane's stepfather may have been abusing her, sexually or otherwise.
No we were closer to god when it all started in the Bible but we are always with god.