Grammatically, there is no such things as an imperative question because imperatives are statements that make commands or polite requests.
If you were to mean the general informal use of "imperative question", I suppose that you would be meaning to say that the question is unavoidable. For example: "The words which left Ivoire's mouth was an imperative question."
a research question is question that you research and make a hypothesis (educated guess) to form the correct answer!!!!!!!!!!!!
An example of a crystal ball question is "Does he love me?"
a rhetorical question
A rhetorical question.
I cant answer this question cause its not a real question . but their is a bunch of questions in anwers.com waiting for you to answer them.
no because it is a statement
The question is the answer to the answer of the question
It is "a question".
because if it didnt have a question mark what question would be a question because the question had a question with a question?
It will depend on the question and there is no clue in the question what it is about!It will depend on the question and there is no clue in the question what it is about!It will depend on the question and there is no clue in the question what it is about!It will depend on the question and there is no clue in the question what it is about!
If the answer to this question is this question then the answer is: What is the answer to this question if the question? However, if you were not re-implying this specific question, then the answer is literally: The answer YOU WIN! TWICE!! Huh! I dont get it whats the question
Question is the Answer
Theriodicly, it's Question.
It is not proper grammar to end a question with another question. A question should end with a question mark, not another question.
the question in an answer
It should be, answer to a question.
a question mark