you put an upside down question mark in the beginning and then a regular question mark at the end.
Example:
¿Donde esta?
The way to do a updside down question mark when typing is: SHIFT+CTRL+ALT+?
In Spanish "noviembre" does not have any accent marks. Note that the months are not capitalized in Spanish.
'¿Que te duele?' is an expression in Spanish that means 'What is hurting you?'. The correct way to write a question in Spanish is to write question marks at the end and at the beginning of the sentence.
It is the same as in English but just with a Spanish accent and accent marks.
"You live near a park." It can also be a question if you put question marks before and after, in which case it's "Do you live near a park?"
Because the same words are used for other purposes (functions) in the language too. So you write the accent so it is clearer yet (besides the question marks!) that you are asking a question. ¿Qué? ¿Quién? ¿Cuál? ¿Cómo? and so on.
"Did" in Spanish is an upside down question mark. There is no "did" word in Spanish. In fact, "do" and others also are upside down question marks.
at the end of a sentence
¿Cuál restaurante? / Cuál restaurante (indirect question, no question marks used)
¿Puede/pueden/puedes/podéis hablar español?. In Spanish, we always use two opposite question marks: ¿?
que tienes
Yes you do.
never put a question mark around the national anthem !
Using double question marks at the end of a sentence is often meant to convey a higher level of surprise, emphasis, or disbelief than a single question mark. It can suggest heightened emotion or uncertainty in the speaker's tone.
You need two question marks, one at the beginning ¿ of your question and one at the end ? as in "¿Qué hora es? (What's the time?)
The last last question mark is compulsory. In formal writing it's better to put both question marks, one opening at the front and one closing at the back, this way: ¿Cómo estás?
In Spanish "noviembre" does not have any accent marks. Note that the months are not capitalized in Spanish.
Question marks should be placed before exclamation marks when a sentence contains both. For example: "Did you see that amazing performance?!"