An open question is a question where the person cannot give a complete answer just by saying yes or no.
Most question that start with any of the "question" words (who, what, when, where, why, how) are open questions. Closed questions generally start with a verb (do, are, have, etc.).
Here are some examples of open questions:
Where are you going?
Why did she do that?
What does that mean?
A closed-ended question is one where the answer is not open to interpretation. An example of a closed-ended question would be, "What is the year of the sinking of the Titanic, 1912 or 1913?"
A feeder question is a question that cannot be answered with yes or no. Also known as an open question. The opposit of an open question (feeder question) is a closed question, which can be answered with Yes or No and no information may not be figured out. Closed questions can end a questioning or interview fast. Here an example: Are you feeling well today? -> closed question Answer: Yes or No. _______________________________________ What is bothering you today? Why aren't you feeling well? -> Feeder Question Answer: I am not feeling well because....etc...and so on..... Just think about it this way: With the FEEDER question you will most likley receive FEEDBACK.
how one person answers the question may differ from another depending on how the data is interpreted.support; argument
The sentence "Whether he was duplicitous regarding his character is open to question" is grammatically correct and complete.
Agasp!
did you kmow about the crime
Well your question is a great example because there are so many answers to your question but If you want another then how about this : How do you feel about (x) and follow up with why.
Cheat this is yet another TMA 2 question from the open university This is yet another Tma 2 Open university Question Please do not answer it This is yet another Tma 2 Open university Question Please do not answer it
type in the following question to find out: when does thunder mountai open up?
false
A closed-ended question is one where the answer is not open to interpretation. An example of a closed-ended question would be, "What is the year of the sinking of the Titanic, 1912 or 1913?"
There is insufficient information in the question to properly answer it. You did not provide details of the "following circuit". Please restate the question.
an open-ended question.
an closed-ended question
A good example is when a person listens to another person's point of view, even if he disagrees.
1. Were there innocent people jailed at Alcatraz? 2. Can humans create smaller versions of black holes?
No. Actually, yes and no. It would be the other way around though, the open ended question being a multiple choice question. Most, if not all, open ended questions are based on the answerer's opinion, and would contain more than one set answer. This would make the question, while still being open ended, a multiple choice question. To clarify, use the following example: Q: "Who is the best movie actor and why are they the best?" A: Multiple. All based on opinion. (I pick Sean Connery, David Tennant, and Matt Smith (I know that he is not in any movies, at least none in the US, but he still is an actor); this makes my answer a multiple choice answer; as for why, They just play their parts magnificently. You see, the example question could have more than one answer, which makes it multiple choice (or close to it) but asks the answerer to elaborate on why they think thus.