This is called a rhetorical question.
His rhetorical abilities meant that he was often sought as a featured speaker. An interrogative remark that does not actually seek an answer is called a rhetorical question.
a rhetorical question- a funny question which doenst need an answer but is funny
If you meant radius in your question, then the answer would be radii or radiuses.
Perhaps Gandhi's answer will help. He was asked after visiting and touring America, what impressed him most. He answered,"the size of their garbage cans".
The most common is potable, meaning drinkable. General Norman Schwarzkopf once answered a question, referencing "potable water" and then he stopped to make sure people knew he meant drinkable rather than portable.
rhetorical
A rhetorical question is a question that is not meant to be answered, as the answer is usually implied or obvious.
A question that isn't supposed to be answered is called a rhetorical question.
This question can't be answered without knowing who is meant by "he" and "them".
A self-answering question is known as a rhetorical question. These types of questions are not meant to be answered, as the answer is already implied by the question itself.
The question cannot be answered without knowing what they are meant to be different from!
Nothing, other than a message from a Supervisor explaining that only unanswered questions are meant to be featured (and the fact that the question will be unfeatured, of course). If an answered question is featured, it is as simple as pressing the "Unfeature" button.
The question cannot be answered because it is ambiguous. Is the decimal fraction meant to be 0.878787... or 0.877777...?
"Can't you do anything right?" is an example of a rhetorical question because it is not meant to be answered, but rather to emphasize a point or make a statement.
This question can be answered differently, because everyone on has their own opinion. But a few answers might be: -Made me athletic -meant to me Sports is not for me
The question cannot be answered because it is ambiguous. It is not clear whether the number is meant to be 2.636363... or 2.633333...
The question cannot be answered because it is ambiguous. Is the repeating fraction meant to be 0.358358358... or 0.358585858... or 0.358888888... ?