no say The child asked he's mom a question dubiously
It should be--- I asked my friend,"When is your birthday?"
The correct punctuation for the sentence is: "How was your weekend?" Jerry asked.
The correct punctuation marks in the sentence are: "What shall we do?" Fred asked Tim.
Either "She asked you what your name was" or "She asked your what your name is" could be correct, depending on the context. If the unspecified "she" has reason to believe that you have used a different name in the past than one that she now knows, the first sentence would be correct. This would probably happen most often when a married woman is introduced in a culture in which women often change their names to match their husband's name, but it could also occur when someone is thought to be using a stage name or pen name, or in England when a person has been given or has inherited a title during his lifetime. Otherwise, the second sentence would be correct.
The correct punctuation for "Are you there yet?" she asked is to add a question mark after "yet" and keep the tag question in lowercase followed by a comma.
The way you asked the question adds no value to the answer.
It should be--- I asked my friend,"When is your birthday?"
The correct punctuation for the sentence is: "How was your weekend?" Jerry asked.
No. If you mean " they asked a question" then the preposition is "by", not "from."
The sentence, 'Can you see if my sentence is correct?', is correct.
The correct punctuation marks in the sentence are: "What shall we do?" Fred asked Tim.
Either "She asked you what your name was" or "She asked your what your name is" could be correct, depending on the context. If the unspecified "she" has reason to believe that you have used a different name in the past than one that she now knows, the first sentence would be correct. This would probably happen most often when a married woman is introduced in a culture in which women often change their names to match their husband's name, but it could also occur when someone is thought to be using a stage name or pen name, or in England when a person has been given or has inherited a title during his lifetime. Otherwise, the second sentence would be correct.
Yes
The correct capitalization for the sentence is: Susan asked, "Have you read Thornton Wilder's 'Our Town'?"
You just asked an interrogative sentence, which is a question.
depends on the question it is asked
If it is just a sentence containing asked a question mark would not be necessary. A question mark would be necessary if the sentence was asking a question.