underline it
An interrogative sentence ends with a question mark (?). This punctuation is used to indicate that a question is being asked.
No, "full punctuation" is not a specific type of punctuation; it usually refers to the use of all standard punctuation marks like periods, commas, question marks, exclamation points, etc. for proper grammar and sentence structure.
No punctuation mark is particularly faster than others.
An apostrophe.
full stop
A question mark is a punctuation mark, it replaces the use of a full stop at the end of a sentence that is asking a question.
Traditional Japanese haiku typically do not use punctuation. However, modern haiku in English may include punctuation for clarity or emphasis.
To type a correct quote, use opening and closing quotation marks (" "). Place the opening quotation mark before the quoted text and the closing quotation mark after the quoted text. This helps signify the beginning and end of the quote.
A punctuation mark is put at the end of a sentence to denote the conclusion of an idea. The punctuation mark used here is mainly a period. However, if you use a question mark at the end of a sentence, then it is used to denote that the material before the question mark was a question. An exclamation mark is used to add emphasis to the before-stated material.
Either you do not put the correct punctuation, or you use too many punctuation marks, or you use none. All sentences, at minimum, must have a period. Pauses need a comma. Interrogatory needs a question mark.
In an answer to a question all punctuation marks are possible, but in a question on WikiAnswers the only punctuation that is allowed are apostrophes and question marks.
A simple full stop is best.