A question can start with any of the following words: how, what, who, why, can, when, where, is, are, will, should, may and many other words.
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There is really no word in English for answering a question with a question.
Yes, the word question has a suffix. The suffix is -tion.
The word 'question' is both a noun and a verb. Example uses:Noun: I can answer your question.Verb: The defense may question the witness.
Words similar to the word 'begun': started, commenced.
If that were a question and started with the word "what", I would say a shape.
What was the primary question that Morgan had when he started the experiment?
another word to get started is too begin
Trick question - the ancient Greek alphabet had no letter y - that sort of word started with an i, the letter iota.
No, the word started is the past tense of the verb start (starts, starting, started). A pronoun is a word to replace a noun, for example I, we, he, she, it, they, etc.
No, the word 'started' is not a noun; the word started is the past tense of the verb to start. Example sentence:We started our trip at four in the morning.
No, the word 'started' is not a noun; the word started is the past tense of the verb to start. Example sentence:We started our trip at four in the morning.
The Person(s) that started the word slapstick is undefined and cannot be told for the fact is we truly do not know who started the word for, in fact the word probably started somewhere around in the Elizabethan Era with Shakespeare.
The opposite of the word "answer" is "question."
The first word in this question is "What."
It depends on the question. The answer to "What is the first word of the question I am now answering?" is "How"
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