No. A statement does not require a response.
Yes. But it is a question not a statement. Also i should be capital 'I'. May I have your name please?
Yes, -that is a fact. -Do you have a question.
You should start a paragrah when either answering a question or answereing a statement to prove your theroy correct.
No, the question should be "What does she have?" in correct grammar. The verb "have" is used in the present simple tense for the third person singular, which is "has" in this case.
No. The sentence should be Are you going to be playing this song?Answer:Actually, if the sentence is a question, provided you inflect it up when spoken and place a question mark at the end when written, it is acceptable. As a statement, it is correct as: "You are going to be playing this song."
Yes, a hypothesis should be formulated as a statement, not a question.
a;; of the above are correct.
In casual writing you might be able to replace a question mark with a period, especially in dialog to indicate intonation, but usually the sentence structure of questions is different, so that a period will not be correct. For example, "Where did you go?" is correct as a question, but "Where did you go." is not correct.
A thesis should be a statement, not a question. It presents the main idea or argument that will be discussed and supported in the essay or research paper.
One is not "more correct" than the other: to you and meis correct, and to you and I is barbarously wrong.
When you combine a statement with a question using 'and,' you should end the sentence with a question mark to indicate that it is a question.
Assertion:"The indefinite articles in the English language are not always used properly."Proof:See this question. It should be "What is anexample of a proof?".Therefore, whoever posted the question did not use the indefinite article correctly in the question. Thus, there is at least one person who did not, on at least one occasion, use the indefinite article properly. Therefore, the statement is proved to be correct.