Read the answers for the questions. Write the question.
1.
A sunflower is yellow.
2.
The sky is blue
3.
Milk is white.
4.
A leaf is green.
5.
A crow is black.
6.
An apple is red.
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Answers
The questions can be written as follows:
1. What is the colour of a sunflower?
2. What colour is the sky?
3. What colour is milk?
4. What is the colour of a leaf?
5. What is the colour of a crow?
6. What is the colour of an apple?
- In the field of English linguistics, such statements that ask a question are referred to as interrogative statements.
- Interrogative statements mostly end with a question mark.
- There is always a possible answer to an interrogative statement.
Answer:
The following are possible questions:
1. What colour does a sunflower have?
1. What colour does a sunflower have? 2. What is the colour of the sky?
1. What colour does a sunflower have? 2. What is the colour of the sky? 3. What is the colour of milk?
1. What colour does a sunflower have? 2. What is the colour of the sky? 3. What is the colour of milk? 4. What colour does a leaf have?
1. What colour does a sunflower have? 2. What is the colour of the sky? 3. What is the colour of milk? 4. What colour does a leaf have? 5. What colour does a crow have?
1. What colour does a sunflower have? 2. What is the colour of the sky? 3. What is the colour of milk? 4. What colour does a leaf have? 5. What colour does a crow have? 6. What colour does an apple have?
Explanation:
- Interrogative statements are used in English linguistics to refer to statements that ask a question.
- And as in the above statements we have been given characteristics of the respective things in form of colour, we make questions related to them.
- The majority of interrogative utterances end with a question mark.
- An interrogative phrase always has a plausible response.