When changing a question into a statement, you generally don't use question words like "who," "what," or "how." You also typically rearrange the word order so that the sentence follows a subject-verb-object pattern. Additionally, you should end the sentence with a period instead of a question mark.
To change a statement into a question, you typically reverse the word order and add a question mark at the end. You can also use question words like "who," "what," "when," "where," "why," or "how" at the beginning of the sentence. Lastly, you can change the intonation of your voice to indicate that it is a question.
To change a statement into a question using tag questions, you add a brief question at the end that echoes the form of the statement. For example, if the statement is "You are coming to the party," the tag question would be "You are coming to the party, aren't you?"
To change a statement into a question, invert the subject and the auxiliary verb, add an interrogative word (like who, what, when, where, why, or how) if necessary, and include a question mark at the end of the sentence. For example, "You are going to the store" changes to "Are you going to the store?"
You can turn a statement into a question by adding a question word (such as who, what, where, when, why, how) at the beginning of the statement, or by changing the word order to make it interrogative. Additionally, you can adjust the tone of your voice to indicate that you are asking a question.
To change a statement into a WH-question, you typically invert the subject and the auxiliary verb, placing the WH-word at the beginning of the question. For example, the statement "You are coming to the party" can be changed to the WH-question "Are you coming to the party?" by inverting "You are" to "Are you" and adding the WH-word "Are" at the beginning.
To change a statement into a question, you typically reverse the word order and add a question mark at the end. You can also use question words like "who," "what," "when," "where," "why," or "how" at the beginning of the sentence. Lastly, you can change the intonation of your voice to indicate that it is a question.
A mission statement is a formal statement of an organization's primary values and the ethical rules its employees follow.
it changed the world by changing the rules, like rules of engagement and changing the lives of japans people for the rest of their lives.
Changing LifeStyle
i am doing thesis.so i want questions for this
financial comparison statement is a statement showing the trend in which financial figures are changing between two accounting period.
change a "y" to "ies"
financial comparison statement is a statement showing the trend in which financial figures are changing between two accounting period.
To change a statement into a question using tag questions, you add a brief question at the end that echoes the form of the statement. For example, if the statement is "You are coming to the party," the tag question would be "You are coming to the party, aren't you?"
No you may not ask any questions in your thesis statement, because the thesis statement basically states your answer to whatever you are doing.
two examples that scince can answer is why is the weather changing in why is the world changing
A however statement is a statement that says for example, Cafeteria rules are stupid; however, they have been improving the way the cafeteria runs