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16y ago

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Related Questions

Is academic a noun or verb?

As a adjective for example 'an academic question' As a noun for example ' he was by temperament an academic' But not a verb


Is the word question a verb?

The word 'question' is both a noun and a verb. Example uses:Noun: I can answer your question.Verb: The defense may question the witness.


Does a question need a noun and a verb?

Not necessarily. For example: What?


Is can a linking or action verb when it start the sentence in a question For example Can you go outside?

action verb


Can the word question be a verb?

Yes.He always questions what I say.


Which form does a verb take to ask a question?

In English, the verb often takes the auxiliary verb "do" before the subject to form a question. For example, "Do you like coffee?" is a question form compared to the statement "You like coffee." This is known as the auxiliary verb "do" in the present simple tense.


What is the structure of interrogative sentence?

An interrogative sentence typically begins with an auxiliary verb (like "is," "are," "do," or "can") or a question word (such as "who," "what," "where," "when," or "why"). This is followed by the subject and the main verb. For example, in the question "Are you coming to the party?" the structure is auxiliary verb ("Are"), subject ("you"), and main verb ("coming"). The sentence often ends with a question mark.


When part of speech is are when it ends a sentence?

"Are" is a verb, even at the end of a sentence. For example, if you say, "Do you know where the scissors are?", "are" is still a verb. In this case, it is the verb of an embedded question. "Scissors" is the subject of the verb "are".


What part of speech is answers?

The word 'answerable' is an adjective; capable of being answered; liable to be asked to give account; accountable. Example sentence:You asked an answerable question.


What is the verb for question?

The word 'question' is actually both a noun and a verb.Examples- "She asked a very simple question." [noun]- "The man was questioned extensively." [verb]


Does a direct object answer a question?

It can. For example: Q) Suzy threw what? A) A pineapple. OR Q) What was thrown? A) Suzy threw a pineapple.


Is it ok to use s with a verb after using does?

No. This situation is found in yes / no question using does. For example: She likes pomegranates. Does she like pomegranates? In the statement the verb has an -s. But in the question the do has -es so the main verb is just the base form = no -s