Want this question answered?
Your Question is not very well worded. A fable is a short story that at the end of it has some kind of teaching or moral.
Be straight forward, honest and polite. Simply tell them the truth but politely.
The way to distinguish between the answer and the question is to look at which one comes first and has a question mark at the end.
700 sq m = 700 sq m and that is all that there is to it. If you wanted conversion to some other unit, perhaps your question could have been worded differently: to ask a question rather than simply stick a question mark at the end of a phrase.
that's too broad of a question the only song that comes to mind is This Is The End by The Maine "This is the end of you and me and everything i used to be...."
The question is worded confusingly. If it were on a test, I'd probably put "polar" and hope that I'd managed to figure out what the teacher was actually trying to ask.
'She looks like a rear-end' (but less politely-put)
No, a period does not come after a question mark in a sentence. The use of a question mark indicates the end of an interrogative sentence, while a period is used to end a declarative sentence.
If you are closing a normal phone call, you should end it politely. You can either thank the person on the other end of the call, or you can close with an ending such as good bye.
That is a question that cannot be answered. No one will live to see that, but what we do know is everything will no longer exist.
The question, 'Does an ice cube melt faster in air or in water?' is fine; note that I added the word 'in' before the word 'water' for further clarity but it was not incorrect without the addition. You could change 'faster' to 'more quickly' but the simpler the question is worded the better. Don't forget to capitalize the first word in the sentence and place a question mark at the end.
Love Comes to an End was created in 1997.