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The "?" sign

  Tags: Punctuation
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jdmoncada
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 Message 9 of 17
02 March 2012 at 4:45pm | IP Logged 
Japanese doesn't use question marks at all. (Aside: I don't know that it uses exclamation marks, either.) The language is coded with the question particle, so it doesn't use punctuation to reinforce it.
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Billy Bob
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 Message 10 of 17
02 March 2012 at 6:53pm | IP Logged 
Zireael wrote:
Why does Spanish have the inverted question and exclamation marks? Are there other languages that have these?

The inverted versions were first recommended by the RAE in 1754, but were slow to be adopted. In informal situations, they tend to be dropped. I've heard about Galician using both inverted marks, and apparently the inverted question mark is sometimes used in Catalan in front of long or ambiguous phrases, according to this.

Edited by Billy Bob on 02 March 2012 at 6:56pm

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Hampie
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 Message 11 of 17
02 March 2012 at 7:31pm | IP Logged 
jdmoncada wrote:
Japanese doesn't use question marks at all. (Aside: I don't know that it uses exclamation
marks, either.) The language is coded with the question particle, so it doesn't use punctuation to reinforce it.

That's not entirely true. They don't use the question mark when a sentence end in the interrogative particle -ka,
but for the lower registers where -ka is not needed and questions are only indicated with a rising tone, a question
mark is used.
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jdmoncada
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 Message 12 of 17
02 March 2012 at 9:03pm | IP Logged 
Thank you, hampie. As I am still relatively new to Japanese and have concentrated more on formal language, I missed this detail.
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mrwarper
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 Message 13 of 17
03 March 2012 at 12:11pm | IP Logged 
The greatest importance of punctuation signs stemmed from their capturing and reflecting speech features that written language had failed to so far. In that sense, 'proper' English, or anything else where turning a statement into a question swaps words around instead of simply altering the intonation, is in less need of questions marks than for example Spanish -- intonation is all too often the only difference between statements and questions there. While we are at it, Spanish sentences are usually longer than their English counterparts, so the opening question mark is actually more helpful than the closing one to get the intonation right without the need to read too far ahead.

Interestingly enough, the more obviously useful something is the later somebody comes up with it.

Edited by mrwarper on 03 March 2012 at 12:14pm

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clumsy
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 Message 14 of 17
20 March 2012 at 12:06pm | IP Logged 
I think Classical Chinese used 耶.
but I don't know if it's not just some ancient question particle.
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Hampie
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 Message 15 of 17
20 March 2012 at 7:24pm | IP Logged 
clumsy wrote:
I think Classical Chinese used 耶.
but I don't know if it's not just some ancient question particle.

One might think they they sometimes wrote questions in a way they would normally not ask them if speaking, just
to show, in writing, that it is indeed a question.
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Iversen
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 Message 16 of 17
21 March 2012 at 10:50am | IP Logged 
The only one of my languages which doesn't use the 'normal' question mark is Greek, where something like a semicolon ; is used instead. Conditioned from many years with ? I think the semicolon thing looks somewhat underwhelming, so my defense technique is to make the lower half larger so that the whole thing almost looks like an inverted Spanish ¿


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