Oh, dude, you're hitting me with the deep questions today! Technically, "Got Milk?" is more of a slogan than a rhetorical question because it's meant to prompt action or thought rather than just make a statement. But hey, if you're feeling philosophical about dairy products, who am I to stop you?
If you had an Overestimate,then whatever you got is equal to or if you round it and you get it.Lets say you did a problem with rounding and multiplication.The question asked is there a reasonable answer for it.The answer you got was 2,500 and the question got 2,750.2,500 is close to 2,750 so that's an Overestimate.If the question got 3,500 then you call that an Underestimate.
88%
72
80%
28/38 * 100% = 73.68% You got about 74% on the test.
It depends on your intonation.
Answer th Which rhetorical element is used in this example? is question…
GOT MILK GOT MILK GOT MILK GOT MILK GOT MILK GOT MILK GOT MILK 7 digits in a phone number
Strange question. Fish are creatures that swim, milk comes from most mammals - what has time got to do with it?
got milk?
"Got Milk."
got milk ?
no milk has no acid
"Got milk?" is an advertising slogan reminding people to buy milk by implying that it is a necessity everyone should have on hand.
answer: to prove they are not rhetorical questions, and that they are just normal questions.ANSWERS:Nothing says empty rhetoric like an answered rhetorical question.ANSWER:Because they've got five minutes till home timeANSWER:Rethorical question are actually not rethorical, cause there is no such thing as a question, that cant be answered. I myself have discovered the meaning of life. I wrote in on a note, stuck it in a box with fake bottom, and that's full of useless junk, so nobody will ever find it. TRUE STORY you can even make me describe the contents.Because there isn't a good enough reason not to.
One of the best known series of milk commercials are the Got Milk? set. These featured well known people, often actors sporting a milk mustache and the tag line "got milk".
Got Milk adverts were created by the advertising agency Goodby Silverstein & Partners for the California Milk Processor Board in 1993. Sean