View Full Version : ? Should the question mark not come before the question...
so that you know it is a question before you read the question.
espanish do this
But of course also, after the question, in case anyone forget,- that it is a question? ?Therefore put a questionmark after the question?
?agreed?
tesco
09-02-2006, 10:17 PM
¿How about having the upside-down question mark before the question then normal one after?
☻
so that you know it is a question before you read the question.
espanish do this
But of course also, after the question, in case anyone forget,- that it is a question? ?Therefore put a questionmark after the question?
?agreed?
I actually read a comic yesterday where they did that.
Of corse, it was mostly a talking cat that did it, but still.
Nope. 90% of questions start with should, what, how, when, etc...so you already know its a question.
Nope. 90% of questions start with should, what, how, when, etc...so you already know its a question.
Is that a totolagy
JPaul
09-03-2006, 05:01 PM
Nope. 90% of questions start with should, what, how, when, etc...so you already know its a question.
That's just nonsense, when you include the "etc" at the end of your examples it makes the whole contention meaningless. With the etc there you would be as well saying 100% of questions, making it a non-point, enough said.
And also, any statement can be made into a question, simply by punctuating it properly.
"You are going to the cinema." is a statement.
"You are going to the cinema?" is a question.
"You are going to the cinema!" is an exclamation.
These marks tell us things which would normally be conveyed by tone and the inflections in our voice.
tesco
09-03-2006, 05:21 PM
JPaul does that mean you agree with 100%'s proposal?
Agrajag
09-03-2006, 05:58 PM
JPaul does that mean you agree with 100%'s proposal?
It actually makes sence to me. Particularly when reading out loud. To know it's a question in advance must surely be a better option than to find out at the end of the sentence.
smeghead
09-04-2006, 12:13 AM
Si, estoy de acuerdo con 100%
But then I'm heavily biased and love the Spanish language/culture.
worldpease
09-04-2006, 12:54 AM
¿Que dicen ustedes?
Jaajaja, ya tenia rato
que no hablaba español en el foro.
ok, back to english.
Barbarossa
09-04-2006, 09:02 AM
"You are going to the cinema?" is a question.
Are you going to the cinema? :blink:
Rip The Jacker
09-04-2006, 10:57 AM
"You are going to the cinema?" is a question.
Are you going to the cinema? :blink:
Can I come? Gotta love the theatre popcorn. :P
limesqueezer
09-04-2006, 11:11 AM
When somebody asks me dumb questions or illogical questions on some chat and i don't have time to explain i answer with it(¿)
Its kind of used, few more years and you will learn it in school
Examples:
Q:Are you crazy ?
A:¿
Q:? Are you crazy
A:??
Barbarossa
09-04-2006, 11:32 AM
Are you crazy?
limesqueezer
09-04-2006, 11:39 AM
¿
? define crazy
tesco
09-04-2006, 04:00 PM
define: Crazy
nibblebot
09-05-2006, 05:30 PM
interesting proposition OP :)
Tempestv
09-05-2006, 05:57 PM
JPaul does that mean you agree with 100%'s proposal?
It actually makes sence to me. Particularly when reading out loud. To know it's a question in advance must surely be a better option than to find out at the end of the sentence.
I have seen some scripts for different things where next to the charicter name, it would note tone for the line- for example:
John (Question) You are going to the cinema?
I think this is to allow the actor to know what tone to use when they read the line
Agrajag
09-05-2006, 08:07 PM
It actually makes sence to me. Particularly when reading out loud. To know it's a question in advance must surely be a better option than to find out at the end of the sentence.
I have seen some scripts for different things where next to the charicter name, it would note tone for the line- for example:
John (Question) You are going to the cinema?
I think this is to allow the actor to know what tone to use when they read the line
Writen direction, as it were.
Powered by vBulletin® Version 4.2.3 Copyright © 2025 vBulletin Solutions, Inc. All rights reserved.