You ask a question you know, say football (soccer), type something in and if it comes up with "Answer it" on the lower right side of the screen and answer any question! And when your done type in the word it says after you click save.
With does, do, why, what, will, is, did, which, where, how, who or whom, must, can, shall, or whatever.
"Does it work?"
"Do they work?"
"Why does it work?"
"What will work?"
"Will it work?"
"Is it going to work?"
"Did it work?"
"Which one worked?"
"Where will it work?"
"How did it work?"
"Who did it work on?" (Technically correct: Whom did it work on?)
"Must you do that?"
"Can it work?"
"Shall it work?"
"Whatever shall we do if it does not work?"
The answers to this question is whatever I am writing now.
audience
You should ask yourself, "Who are my readers?"
You may start an informal sentence with "and," but not a formal one. In formal speech and writing, you don't begin sentences with "and" or "but."
Cuneiform writing began in Mesopotamia
If you are writing a business letter, you should begin with the date. After that comes the person's name, title, and address.
In 1689, Todd Strasser begin writing.
a problem; the problem's solution
Yes, it did
Mesopotamians invented it!
Sumeria, obviously.
Begin by using real words like "writing," instead of jargon like "the writing process."