Statement: You hate me.
Question: Do you hate me?
Statement: Dogs bark too much.
Question: Do you think dogs bark too much?
Statement: John knows Kelly.
Question: John, do you know Kelly?
If you need to ask a question as a quote, you'd write it as:
"John, do you know Kelly?" their boss asked.
"Do you think dogs bark too much?" the woman asked her neighbors.
If a sentence is in the form of a question, you would generally end it with a question mark. This punctuation mark signals to the reader that the sentence is an inquiry.
This is an interrogative sentence, as it is asking a question.
No, the correct sentence would be "Who is the singing woman?" by adding a question mark at the end. It is asking for the identity of a woman who is singing.
You can use "prefer" in a question by asking someone what they like more or what they would choose. For example, "Do you prefer coffee or tea?"
The pronoun 'that' in the sentence, "That is why." refers to the sentence(s) or explanation preceding it, which would be a response to a question starting with 'why'.
No, an exclamation point is not the proper punctuation for that sentence. Instead, it should end with a question mark since it is asking a question.
"Where do you live?" is present tense. The person asking the question wants to know where someone lives now. If the person asking the question wanted to know where someone used to live, some time in the past, the sentence would be, "Where did you live?" If the person asking the question wanted to know where someone was going to live, some time in the future, the sentence would be, "Where will you live?"
So- you are asking when to use 'when' in a sentence. When you are asking how to use when in a question, you are already using when in a sentence, because a question actually is a sentence. I like to use when in a sentence whenever I like.
When you're asking a question. "Are you having a good morning?" But if that's your way of greeting someone, it would be "Good morning."
If it is just a sentence containing asked a question mark would not be necessary. A question mark would be necessary if the sentence was asking a question.
The same answer as your purpose in asking such a dumb question
whats a sentence with WHERE in it???
Asking a blind man what he saw would be an irrelevant question.
No it wouldn't you see it isn't a question your saying to someone not asking a question
Assuming the sentence refers to something you ask yourself, it would typically end with a period.
When being rhetoric u can also be sarcastic. rhetoric is to ask a question that u physicaly dont wnat an answer to, it is good the ask rhetorical question by asking someone a question that they very obviously know the answer to and dont need to answer
You need to separate your question from the sentence you are asking about, but if the sentence you are asking about is "You hope that your family will return home safely." then the answer is "Yes." I would phrase your question as follows: Is this sentence grammatically correct? "You hope that your family will return home safely."
Yes it is, an alternative way of asking the same question would be "What time do you make it?".