It could mean that the question is important and an answer is wanted quickly.
this is a multiple choice question
Are u questioning my authority, sir
Someone recently asked me a question about a common multiple.
A rhetorical sentence makes a questioning statement that does not expect an answer - it is only expected to make the listener think. An interrogative sentence asks a question that expects, if not requires, an answer from the listener.
does this interminable questioning have a purpose.
I was accepted in a college
The police officer is questioning the witnesses.After the accident, we're questioning Grandma's judgement behind the wheel.Why did the lawyer pursue that line of questioning?Seeing questioning looks from her students, the teacher repeated the instructions
No. The grammatically correct sentence would read, "Did he get accepted into college?" or "Was he accepted into college?".
I accepted the apologie
"Questioning" is the present participle or gerund form of the verb "question", but in a sentence, the single word "questioning" or a phrase introduced by this word usually functions as a noun element (for the gerund) or an adjective or adverb element (for the participle.)
The syntax of this question is so whimsical as to be unanswerable. The sentence is apart from meaning in standard English. Please rethink the question and get assistance as to the proper and accepted sentence structure and resubmit.
If you could write that question, then you already have the answer. It's a word followed by another. You can rarely write a sentence with only one word....