Is Jurassic Park a documentary?
Does money grow on trees?
Is India more populated than Vatican?
Is this an interrogative sentence?
Is Dwayne Johnson the son of Lyndon B. Johnson?
Let me save you from nitpicking, just in case: the President Johnson had only two daughters. None of whom was named Dwayne.
According to the Beatles: You say "yes", I say... ?
Does Tuesday come after Monday?
What is the antonym for "Yes"?
Is a ton heavier than a kilogram?
Do you have 6 arms, 3 legs and 7 eyes?
Is there a country in the UN whose name starts with X?
Is a baby sheep called a lumb?
Have you read this question?
Pikachu is yellow, am I right?
Have you ever been on the internet?
Correct!
Incorrect
You left this blank
WHERE IS HE? WHERE (Are you sure) IS OMNI_MAN?
Thanks for the sequel :)
easierharder than the original, but it’s a good type of hard!That is not a translation. Or is it? Can I translate #1 too? Doesn't seem done.
Personal note, don't take quizzes with a beer buzz.
One glaring problem (lie) though: if you blindly answer "yes" to all the questions on your first try you get unfairly marked wrong for question #18.
kinda looks like 69420
No, the word 'this' is not an interrogative sentence. On the face of it a silly complaint, but I just might have spent a significant portion of this quiz's time to answer that question wrongly...
When the word is a non-English word, it's more common to set it with italics, whether or not the sentence is referring to a word's literal value: "I came, as you might say, par avion."
There are also lots of other reason to set a word in italics (certain proper nouns, book titles) but the most common is emphasis, as it is here in this question and in the first and last paragraph of this comment.
You can use italics to refer to a literal word, but you don't have to.
Kendall: yes it does, it's paper