yes,
it is a question, however you might avoid ending it with a proposition. Try,
that way he or she can feel the excitement of drumming as I do.
I could answer this question for you. could means might be able to
Able to do anything
to be a pro. in drumming you need to be able to access a LLAMA! xD
Dozens of songs begin with drumming, but 15 steps by Radiohead, the song that appears on the credits of Twilight, is one of them that I like; other users hopefully will be able to give more candidates.
If you have a passport, yes you could.
if DNA was inextricable it would not be able to undergo gene expression.
Like most animals, emus communicate via sounds. The sound made by an emu can best be described as a deep-throated "drumming". They are able to fill their throat pouches with air, generating a drumming sound that can be heard hundreds of metres away.
Being able is the correct version of the sentence. You can use it as a fragment of any sentence.
Shouldn't stayed silent
By the time you read this sentence, you will have gotten a grade for the class already. By standing on a ladder, she was able to reach the light bulb.
'would' means desiring or pretending to be but not having succeeded 'could' on the other hand means, to be able to, to know how to or to have the power to. for example; I would have been able to answer this question if only I has known how to. Of course I could answer this question, look above, I just did
It depends a bit on context. In a sentence where you ask about someone's technical capacities like: 'are you able to operate this", a synonym could be 'are you capable of operating this'. In a more general sense, you would replace 'are you able to...' simply with: 'can you....'.