Answer:
Does Sita tell a story?
Explanation:
There are four sentence types: declarative, interrogative, imperative, and exclamative.
Interrogative sentences are used to ask questions, and the form of an interrogative sentence is as follows:
auxiliary verb + subject + verb
To answer this question we first need to identify the elements of the sentence:
Subject: Sita
Verb: tells (simple present, second-person singular)
Direct object: a story
Then, identify the propper auxiliary verb. Since this is a simple present, a second-person singular verb, the auxiliary verb should be "does".
So, the correct answer is:
Does Sita tell a story?
I think it might be an idiom
God and the others, "<span>As for God and the Other, they cannot be demonstrated,
And what cannot be demonstrated does not exist"</span>
You might do something you never wanted to do in the first place, without thinking about it. For example, if you were startled by someone sneaking up on you, and you punched them in the face impulsively, and that person was, say, your mother, then you might want to undo your actions.