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Note that interrogative sentences always end with a question mark.
In most languages, a single question mark is used, and only at the end of an interrogative sentence: "How old are you?"
Interrogative sentences begin with do, does, or did.
Questions are normally 'put' or 'asked' using interrogative Sentence (linguistics).
An interrogative sentence asks a question and hence ends with a question mark.
An interrogative sentence or question is commonly used to request information - "Do I have to go to work?"
Responses to negative interrogative sentences can be problematic.
Inversion of the subject and verb is used in interrogative sentences:
This word order is always kept, regardless of a declarative sentence or an interrogative sentence.
Anteposition of the particle lu (or lo), in some interrogative sentences.
An interrogative sentence, or question, asks something.
The verb comes first in interrogative sentences.
All declarative and most interrogative sentences follow this pattern, the interrogatives with a changed emphasis.
"Negative questions" are interrogative sentences which contain negation in their phrasing, such as "Shouldn't you be working?"
The following example shows an interrogative sentence with an initial question word (Gerzenstein 1995:178:
Word order in interrogative sentences is the same as in declarative sentences.
Young Seoul dialect speakers tend to end interrogative sentences (questions) with -nya?
Thus, an interrogative sentence is a sentence whose grammatical form indicates that it is a question.
The voice intonation is replaced by facial expressions which mark interrogative sentences, imperatives and relative clauses.
Queries can also be constructed by a sequence of declarative sentences followed by one interrogative sentence, for example:
In an interrogative sentence which uses a question word, there is a rising and then falling of pitch near the beginning and a drop at the end.
(interrogative sentence, condition first)
In interrogative sentences (English "wh-questions"), the past witnessed suffix is -ā instead of -s(i).
In this year's Bloopie Awards, I noted the trend among advertising copywriters against using question marks at the end of interrogative sentences.
Why no mention of Gilbert Sorrentino's remarkable novel 'Gold Fools', written entirely in interrogative sentences?