A question mark is used at the end of a question (interrogative).
In Spanish, there is an inverted question mark ( ¿ ) before the sentence to help the reader (especially out-loud readers) know that the sentence is a question, because yes-no questions and their answers can have exactly the same form. (e.g. He has a cat? or He has a cat. = Tiene un gato)
A question mark goes at the end of an interrogative sentence. Ex: Johnny, did you eat the last cookie?
A question mark (?) goes at the end of an interrogative sentence.
An interrogative sentence ends with a question mark.
An interrogative mark, also known as a question mark, is a punctuation symbol (?) used at the end of a sentence to indicate that it is a question. It prompts the reader to consider the sentence as interrogative and to expect a response.
Interrogative sentence Interrogative sentence
A question mark goes at the end of an interrogative sentence. Ex: Johnny, did you eat the last cookie?
You end an interrogative sentence with a question mark(?).
A question mark (?) goes at the end of an interrogative sentence.
An interrogative sentence ends with a question mark.
A Question Mark.
An interrogative mark, also known as a question mark, is a punctuation symbol (?) used at the end of a sentence to indicate that it is a question. It prompts the reader to consider the sentence as interrogative and to expect a response.
Interrogative sentence Interrogative sentence
No, interrogative sentences typically end with a question mark. Using a period at the end of an interrogative sentence can change its intended meaning.
A question mark.
Interrogative sentences are questions, so the tend to end with a question mark.
At the end of an interrogative sentence.
The sentence, What would you like for lunch, is an interrogatory. It asks a question.