If you are posing a question, use a question mark (?) for punctuation.
A question mark... You wrote an interrogative sentence in your question :)
An interrogative is a question. It ends with a question mark. No other sentence needs this type of punctuation.
question mark
A question mark.
A Question Mark
a question mark
A question mark goes at the end of an interrogative sentence. Ex: Johnny, did you eat the last cookie?
No, an interrogative sentence typically ends with a question mark. This punctuation indicates that the sentence is asking a question rather than making a statement.
One 'full stop' punctuation mark (i.e., a period, question mark, or exclamation point) at the end of a sentence is sufficient, whether it is within or outside of a quote, parentheses, etc. Anything more is just unnecessary clutter.
An interrogative sentence is a type of sentence that asks a question and uses a question mark at the end.
a question mark
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(?).
At the end of a statement (a declarative or imperative sentence), you can use a period. After exclamatory sentences, use an exclamation mark, and after interrogative sentences, use a question mark.
A Question Mark.
Punctuation at the end of a sentence indicates a complete thought.
A question mark.
The different punctuation at the end of a sentence are mostly period ("."), Question mark ("?"), Exclamation mark ("!").
One 'full stop' punctuation mark (i.e., a period, question mark, or exclamation point) at the end of a sentence is sufficient, whether it is within or outside of a quote, parentheses, etc. Anything more is just unnecessary clutter.
a close punctuation means a punctuation at the end of each sentence
Not necessarily. Sometimes it can, like an interrogative question ending in a question mark. Imperative questions though, could end in a full stop or sometimes an exclamation mark or even a colon.
At the end of a sentence.