statistical fallacy
Two examples are asking what a celebrity's house address is, and what their personal telephone number is.
There is nothing wrong in asking that question.
.... a public opinion poll.
Infinity is not a number. It is the idea that for every number that exists, there exists a number greater than that. Therefore, asking the question "What number comes after infinity" is like asking "Where is the corner of the Earth". Since the Earth has no corners, the question is meaningless, as is yours.
That depends on what the question is. A percent is just a number. You're asking "How do you solve a number?"
Yes, a relative clause can easily be part of a question sentence; for example:Who was it who phoned last night?Where is the toothpaste that contains the whitener?Did you find the girl, whose number you wanted, in the library?
sorry your question is not clear what you are asking, try rewording it.
You are asking a question that can't be answered with the information given.
same question i am asking i hope some one will see this question and improve this answer by putting in the divisors of that number
If I think your asking the question how I think your asking it, then any number 5 and above you round up. If its below 5 you round down. :-)
None. Lakh is a pure number and is not capable of asking or raising questions.
i donty know im asking the question you stupid