প্রশ্নার্থক, প্রশ্নসূচক
(1) Relating to verbs in the so-called interrogative mood.
(2) Relating to the use of or having the nature of an interrogation.
(3) Relating to the use of or having the nature of aninterrogation.
(1) A sentence of inquiry that asks for a reply
(2) Some linguists consider interrogative sentences to constitute a mood
(1) Of course, the defence power supports that in a way which perhaps does not raise the interrogative qualities of capital issues or the like which cause one to have pause for thought.
(2) Williams has a comparable interrogative edge, a sense of the difficulty of doing justice to the complexity and sheer intractability of reality, and of the unavoidability of tragedy, conflict and fragmentariness.
(3) All the suggestibility scores were highly elevated and indicate that he tends to give in very readily to leading questions and interrogative pressure.
(4) It presets the bounds of inquiry, cramps the interrogative space, and derails the track switching (from field to analysis and back again) that earmarks ethnographic work.
(5) It was a spontaneous, unrehearsed, utterance of a closed interrogative clause with a complex subject containing an auxiliary.
(6) Stevens paused again, changing the sound of his voice to an interrogative tone.
(7) But a fair number of people leave out the question marks (for example here, here, and here), which suggests that the interrogative force isn't obvious.
(8) While some scholars argue for re-enactment's interrogative possibilities, these possibilities tend to be circumscribed.
(9) In addition, accusative case on who does not typically survive when the word is shunted to the beginning of an interrogative or relative clause.
(10) Whatever the reason, I'll be wishing him well because, in our adversarial, interrogative culture, there's still a place for Parkinson's gentlemanly, self-effacing approach.
(11) But most companies feel this is cheating, and in any case why deny someone from personnel the chance to sit on a board for a day, eating biscuits and displaying all the interrogative skills of a turnip.
(12) U251cu00f6u251cu00e7u251cu2510Are you willing to worku251cu00f6u251cu00e7u251cu00fb is a common interrogative thrown at women in St Kilda, no matter what their purpose or destination.
(13) In my last post on the subject, I admitted that I could accept subject-drop in a noninverted declarative, but not in a noninverted interrogative .
(14) It is manifested in his troubled, interrogative attitude towards war, his awareness that science unbridled by compassion is folly, and the relentless desire for knowledge a pathology.
(15) While you're wrestling with the interrogative particles of Mandarin you could, for example, reflect on the fact that Scotland is on its way to becoming the greatest small country in the world.
(16) Is part of your argument that whatever the expression u251cu00f6u251cu00e7u251cu2510the course of questioningu251cu00f6u251cu00e7u251cu00fb means, it must involve some activity on the part of the police of an interrogative nature?
(17) When the member reads the legislation he will find out that the process inside the first hearing of either setting up their allocation plan or making the decisions is one that is more interrogative than adversarial.
(18) In the soliloquy above he engages in a brilliant radical gloss on conventional thinking, through a series of interrogative puns, and abrasive appropriations of the conventional language of society.
(19) The interrogative mood questions the listeners.
(20) She couldn't seem to find the proper interrogative , what, why and how all seemed appropriate.
interrogatory
question
interrogation
interrogative sentence
Declarative