ANSWERS: 4
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huh?.lol.im kidn . wo knows honestly.lmao
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(just having some fun with you here because we all typo): It's usually the people that can't spell seem! (cheers mate, intended in fun only)
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I suppose cause it's difficult to remember the difference between words like seam and seem...
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1) "The simplest questions implicitly or explicitly request information from a certain range (finite or infinite) of alternatives. When information purporting to be that requested is presented back to the questioner, the question is said to be answered. The information thus presented is called an answer. Answers may be right or wrong. They are wrong if they present false information. If they present information from outside the proffered alternatives, they may be called wrong or simply inappropriate or irrelevant. This depends on the context, as do several other possibilities: Sometimes "I don't know" is an acceptable answer, sometimes even a right answer. The same is true of "None of the above" and "There is no answer." An answer is the, or a, right answer, if it presents true information which falls within the determined range of alternatives. Questions of this simplest sort usually begin with Who, what, which, where, when, does/do, is/are. Other questions do not so easily fit this mould. For example, questions beginning "Why" and "How" often request any information at all that will alleviate certain confusion in a person who wants to ask that question. Here the manner in which the information is presented might be more important than which information is presented; the questioner may even already know all of the information contained in the right answer, and merely needs it to be expressed in a more useful form." Source and further information: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Question 2) It seems that there are other ways to ask questions, as with question words, such as: - does/do, is/are - describe...? (Knowledge) - retell... (Comprehension) - could you give an example of... - could you classify... - Place the following in order of priority... 3) Some people just describe their situation and have the unformulated question "What should I do?" In this range, there can be a lot of unformulated questions. The reason for this could be some laziness but also the limited space allocated to questions on AB. However, a question of this kind could be unclear. For instance: "Beatles or Rolling stones?" "Windows or Linux?" "Windows Vista?" Here something such as "Please compare [both]" or "What do you think of..." could be assumed. If the question is unclear, it could become: - less answers or even no answers - not seeked answers, which assume another meaning of the question as originally thought - answers, which first ask to clarify the question Bad formulated question have lesser chances to get good answers. However, I do not stick too much to the form of the question to sort out which question is for me interesting to answer.
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