Draw a squiggly line under the 0.
No, indirect questions do not require question marks.
Just so that you can ask questions about it.
If you are not sure, just try your best!
its actually called "a break".
Question marks should be placed before exclamation marks when a sentence contains both. For example: "Did you see that amazing performance?!"
The combination of a question mark with quotation marks is used to indicate a question within a quote. This punctuation is referred to as a question within a question or a quoted question.
Question marks are the punctuation used when you ask a question. Here is an example: Can we go to the park today? This is the question mark: ?
A number of computer programs and phone apps have built in spell-checkers. If the word you have used is not one which the computer/phone recognizes, it marks it with a squiggly red line. This does not necessarily mean that you have spelled the word wrong: it could be a proper noun, or a slang word, or a spelling which is not used by the geek who created the program. The squiggly line is only an alert; you must decide if the word actually needs changing.
Quotation marks follow the question mark.
Question marks (?) and full stops (.) are punctuation marks used in writing to indicate the end of a sentence (full stop) or to signal a direct question (question mark).
The question mark should be placed inside the quotation marks if you are quoting a question.
Draw a squiggly line under the 0.
No, question marks come before periods when forming a question within a sentence, for example: "Did you finish your homework?" If a full sentence is a question, the question mark is placed at the end, for example: "Where are you going?"
No, but you can use characters that look like question marks, for example ʔ.
A box shape with squiggly lines is a freeform shape.
jelly beans, squiggly gummy worms, what ever is squiggly