interrogative sentence in a sentence
Examples
- 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.
- The word order of a sentence is subject-verb-object / complement . This word order is always kept, regardless of a declarative sentence or an interrogative sentence.
- The tone 3, 4, 5 and 6 are dipping in the last syllable when is an interrogative sentence or an exclamatory sentence . " really ? " is pronounced.
- In some languages, questions are apparently marked with a low-pitch, how odd it appears to me . . . It is hard to imagine a working language without interrogative sentences, actually.
- In Unish, the difference between a declarative sentence and an interrogative sentence is that the former ends with a period and falling intonation, while the latter ends with a question mark and rising intonation.
- Indirect questions ( or " interrogative content clauses " ) are subordinate clauses used within sentences to refer to a question ( as opposed to " direct questions ", which are interrogative sentences themselves ).
- In other words, " The numbers refer to XXX ", where XXX is unknown and questioned, becomes " What do the numbers refer to ? " ( with normal do support found in English interrogative sentences ).
- His 1999 novel, " Gold Fools ", is written entirely in interrogative sentences not, as critic Steven Moore says, " just to see if he could pull it off, but because he wanted to interrogate our cultural assumptions about the Old West ."
- Interrogative sentences probably had the word about which a question was being asked ( usually the verb ) placed first, and in case of yes / no questions an interrogative particle may have been attached to the first word ( as in Gothic ).
- Naturally, I assumed these people were idiots, but in the spirit of WP : AGF assumed they were not native speakers of English, and their natural language did not have interrogative sentences . "'So, my question is : There is a language without questions . "' " e-mail ) 04 : 37, 14 March 2007 ( UTC)