a question that has only just been asked
Create conversation and you will find a new question in there somewhere.
You just asked a new question! Great job!! To ask a new question, be sure the bar at the top is green (blue is to answer a question), then type the question. WikiAnswers will suggest similar questions, but if none of them are the same as your question, there is an option to submit it as a new question. Good luck!
A new question in an experiment would be a revised hypothesis.
Allow me to answer your question with a question, why!?!
nope
Your question makes no sense, please try again with a new question.Your question makes no sense, please try again with a new question.
Click on the question, it will open a new window, then click on "Answer question".
New answers section... P.S this question is fail
Your question needs to be in a complete sentence.
This question makes no sense. Please ask a new question and list what wires you are asking about.This question makes no sense. Please ask a new question and list what wires you are asking about.
If you believe a question should be divided into two separate questions, do the following:- Edit the question, discarding the less important part. That leaves one simple question. This is your first question.- Next, turn the part that you discarded into a brand new question.-You now have two good questions. To help the original asker, you can add the second, new question to the first as a Related Question and say, in the answer box, 'See Related Question below'. Only do this if the new question is actually related.People who ask two-part questions will only receive the answer to the part of their question that was turned into the first question. The other part is the new question you created and they will only see that if you include it as a Related Question. Otherwise they will have to submit it as a new question - and your answer will be ready for them.*This question is part of the Glossary of Answers.com and Related Terms.*
To answer a question we need a who, what, when, where, why or how question. Your question doesn’t tell us where you are asking about.