The next two questions, 11 and 12, are based on this sentence: After much practice in Archery, Lois was able to hit the target with a high degree of accuracy. 11. The word degree has more than one meaning. What does the word mean in the sentence? A. An academic title B. A step or stage in a process C. Intensity or amount D. A unit of division in a temperature scale 12. Which of the following is most specifically connected with the word archery? A. Practice B. Aiming C. A skill D. An arrow
This question is of particular interest because the person asking it is under the mistaken impression that scientific notation is one word and not two.
Only if the two questions are in the one sentence.
The declarative statement would be: "There are two low tides and two high tides each day." This is a simple declaration of a fact. The interrogative, or question form would be: "Are there two low tides and two high tides each day?" Asking, in the simplest terms, 'does it happen' without regard for the mechanisms involved. "Why are there two..." presumes the truth of the declarative sentence and inquires about the mechanisms behind the events. "Why there are two low tides and two high tides each day" again presumes the truth of the declarative sentence. This doesn't ask a question, however. It is not even a complete sentence. It is a statement that what follows is an explanation; what follows will be the answer to the question "Why are there two...". So you could say that the statement in the Question above is 'procedural'. When sentences are in this form, you can help clarify the function of the sentence by putting in front of it [This is]. "This is why there are two low tides and two high tides each day." Then the material that follows gives the details.Sometimes people learning English as a second language have difficulty forming verbs the way they are formed in English. "Why there are two low tides ..." is then intended to be the question form, "Why are there two..." This is virtually always the case when sentences in this form are submitted here as questions.Statements in this form "Why there are two low tides and two high tides each day" could be the name of an essay that explains what is happening, but again it is not a complete sentence as it stands.
You do the opposite of what the question is asking you to do. So if the question is asking you to add, you subtract instead. example: 26a =78 26a=78 (26*a =78) _______ 26 (divide by 26) a=3 hope this helped.<3
That's not a question -- not even a sentence.
You need to answer this question because we don’t do homework and it is asking you for your critical thinking skills and how well you understood the lesson. It doesn’t want our answers.
This is not a question so you do not need to use a question mark at the end of your sentence.
This question is of particular interest because the person asking it is under the mistaken impression that scientific notation is one word and not two.
In asking this question you have already answered it, when you are in love you will never need to question it! Adam :)
Please write your question in a complete sentence so it can be understood and answered. Israel and the United Kingdom are two different countries. Which one are you asking about?
A person was asked to do something. She replied "What are you asking for?" as she did not understanding what she was supposed to do. The reply was "Because that is how you are supposed to do it." The reply was to the question "Why are you asking?" and the question was supped to mean "what are you asking me to do?" One message, "what are you asking for?" and two different interpretations.
The word 'is' can begin a sentence but not be a question when it is the subject of the question. Example sentence - Is can be the subject in a sentence. But only in sentences of that type (above) or, 'Is' is a two letter word. Otherwise is cannot begin a sentence.
Asking about seeing them is incorrect. If you are asking about currency exchanges, you'd need to change your question to include which two currencies to use; e.g., what should the 100 Russian roubles be converted to?
I don't really know what your question is. However, I think that it is asking this: "Do you do your homework?" Is that a sentence, and why or why not? Yes, that is a sentence. In order to be a sentence, it needs to have two things: a subject and a verb. A verb is an action. In this case, the second "do" is the verb: I do, you do, they do. The subject is whatever is performing the action. In this case, "you" is the subject. So it has a subject and a verb. Hope I helped!
reciprocate a certification between two state. (It's as much a sentence as the question is.)
It's virtually impossible to start a non-question sentence with a word like did. You need a subject to begin with. For example: "Mary did the dishes." You can't say "Did Mary the dishes." because for one, it doesn't make sense, and two, placing the verb before the subject (or what's called subject-verb inversion) turns the sentence into a question. Even still "Did Mary the dishes?", though technically correct, is very archaic, and you'd never hear a native English speaker ask a question like that. Instead, you'd hear "Did Mary do the dishes?"
your two dads is very proud of you for asking that and so am i