Yes. After your question is posted, click "edit FAQs" in the right column of the question page. Note that you need to be signed in to do this.
It depends on what the coin is. More information is needed. Post new question.
The just chatting topic might be a good place. If you would like a topic opened, please message or email a supervisor and they will be more than willing to help. It is possible that they will suggest another topic. If so, than please post there.
"Does ripe fruit contain more sugar than unripe fruit?" or "At which stage of development does fruit contain more sugar: ripe or unripe?"
That's not a question, that's a homework assignment. We don't do those.
Wheat penny's range in value from one cent to more than $1,000.00. Please be more specific and post new question.
In 1887 the U.S. mint made more than one silver coin. Post a new question with a denomination.
There is no difference between moving a question to another topic and editing its FAQs. Every question appears in at least one FAQ (i.e. topic section). For example, this question is in the "Questions about WikiAnswers Website" category. This appears in the location bar at the top as "Location: Answers.com > WikiAnswers > Categories > Miscellaneous > Questions about WikiAnswers Website > What is the difference between moving a question to a different topic and editing its FAQs?". If you click the "recategorize" link (if you're not signed in you won't see this) you can move the question to a different topic/FAQ or classify it under more than one such topic. The "recategorize" form has checkboxes to select the appropriate topic(s). It is somewhat confusing that the topic for a question also appears under "Related Categories" in the left-hand column. This is a backwards way of saying the question is located in the "Questions about WikiAnswers Website" FAQ.
If no one has replied to the topic, feel free to contact another contributor, supervisor, or community assistance in helping you with your question, I'm sure someone will be more than grateful to help.
More information is needed about the suspected errors. Please post a new question with more details. Use the discussion box rather than the answer box if you need to add more information than will fit in the question section.
It depends on what you mean by a full collection, please be more specific and post new question.
The question is incomplete. Please post a new version with the rest of the problem.
i think writing an methodology is by knowing what your topic is and what it is to do with your topic and what you need to do to make your topic what it is supposed to be