First find the question. Then press edit answer and you can write in there what you wish then press save and you have also answered the question
If you mean on WikiAnswers, no, they are not an answer on WikiAnswers. If a person has absolutely no information to put in an answer, they should go to another question that they can answer or at least partially answer. Answering a question even with "I don't know" makes that question appear to be answered on WikiAnswers, which means it is less likely to BE answered, because people will think it already has been.
That should be answered with another question, "Why are you gay?"
No, they may have not realized there was another form of the question already on the site.
You can ask another contributor, I tried that once and it really worked.
You can ask a question and answer your own question. You can then ask another question. If you ask a question that has already been answered you will see that in the asking process.
Click on the "Improve Answer" box, and start typing when the window comes up.
If you find a wrong answer on WikiAnswers, you are welcome to correct it. That is the way WikiAnswers works, anyone can answer a question, and anyone can change what another has answered.
This is likely a problem with your browser or connection.
The only person that could say that is the person who asked the question. Other than the questioner's purpose, it is just another question that needs to be answered on WikiAnswers.
This question is similar to another one that is already answered. Please visit the answer at this link:Sacred_site_for_hindus_2_words
It would be the same question.
Question alternatives. When a user asks a question, another user may add alternative wordings to that question - if another user asks a question with the same wording as another question (or its alternatives), they will be redirected right to the already answered question. This helps askers get the information they want faster, and it helps answerers to answer different questions and provide their expertise elsewhere, using less time to answer the same question twice.