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V5 A [b]question[/b] is an interrogative statement, or expression used to request information.

This tag is used when a question is present in the image. May be shown as text or pictographics.

Punctuation only remarks such as [[?]], [[!?]], or [[...?]] use their respective tags instead, and do not count as a question. Conversely, a question with such punctuation should not use those punctuation tags with the exception of [[ellipsis]] usage, which may always be tagged.

[b]Categories[/b]

Questions fall under the umbrella term asking. More concepts can be found there.

[b]General question[/b]

[i]General questions have yes, or no answers.[/i]

* [[yes-no_question]]

[b]Choice question[/b]

[i]Choice questions ask to choose between two or more possibilities.[/i]

* [[choice_question]]

[b]Special question[/b]

[i]Special questions are called special, because they require a more detailed response than a general question. A special question begins with a question word.[/i]

* [[asking_how]]
* [[asking_what]]
* [[asking_when]]
* [[asking_where]]
* [[asking_who]] - Also whom, whose etc.
* [[asking_why]]

[b]Tag questions[/b]
[i]Tag questions are attached to ends of statements and ask for clarity, agreement, or confirmation of the statement.[/i]

* [[tag_question]]

[b]Conditional question[/b]
[i]This category includes what are know as what if statements. These types of questions mainly involve hypothetical scenarios.[/i]

* [[conditional_question]]

[b]Indirect question[/b]
[i]Indirect questions are essentially statements that contain an embedded question.[/i]

[b]Other[/b]

[i]There are questions that don't cleanly fit into any of the aforementioned categories, at least not by how we tag them. One such example are statements that are used in a questioning manner. Some of these fit into a specific category, but others leave it unclear and ambiguous what is being asked. This form of question may be tagged as questioning_tone and may overlap with other question categories.[/i]

[b]Question target[/b]

The prefix asking is preferred over questioning.

* [[asking_another]]
* [[asking_self]]
* [[asking_viewer]]

h4 Related tags

* [[answer]] - A response to a question.

h4 Related themes

* [[ask_blog]]
* [[questioning_tone]]
* [[questioning_heart]]

h4 See also

* [[dialogue]]
* [[text]]
Updated by TitanRax20 Tue, Mar 28 '23, 21:05
V4 A [b]question[/b] is an interrogative statement, or expression used to request information.

This tag is used when a question is present in the image. May be shown as text or pictographics.

Punctuation only remarks such as [[?]], [[!?]], or [[...?]] use their respective tags instead, and do not count as a question. Conversely, a question with such punctuation should not use those punctuation tags with the exception of [[ellipsis]] usage, which may always be tagged.

Questions that end with !? that are not only punctuation should also be tagged as interrobang exclamation.

[b]Categories[/b]

Questions fall under the umbrella term asking. More concepts can be found there.

[b]General question[/b]

[i]General questions have yes, or no answers.[/i]

* [[yes-no_question]]

[b]Choice question[/b]

[i]Choice questions ask to choose between two or more possibilities.[/i]

* [[choice_question]]

[b]Special question[/b]

[i]Special questions are called special, because they require a more detailed response than a general question. A special question begins with a question word.[/i]

* [[asking_how]]
* [[asking_what]]
* [[asking_when]]
* [[asking_where]]
* [[asking_who]] - Also whom, whose etc.
* [[asking_why]]

[b]Tag questions[/b]
[i]Tag questions are attached to ends of statements and ask for clarity, agreement, or confirmation of the statement.[/i]

* [[tag_question]]

[b]Conditional question[/b]
[i]This category includes what are know as what if statements. These types of questions mainly involve hypothetical scenarios.[/i]

* [[conditional_question]]

[b]Indirect question[/b]
[i]Indirect questions are essentially statements that contain an embedded question.[/i]

[b]Other[/b]

[i]There are questions that don't cleanly fit into any of the aforementioned categories, at least not by how we tag them. One such example are statements that are used in a questioning manner. Some of these fit into a specific category, but others leave it unclear and ambiguous what is being asked. This form of question may be tagged as questioning_tone and may overlap with other question categories.[/i]

[b]Question target[/b]

The prefix asking is preferred over questioning.

* [[asking_another]]
* [[asking_self]]
* [[asking_viewer]]

h4 Related tags

* [[answer]] - A response to a question.

h4 Related themes

* [[ask_blog]]
* [[questioning_tone]]
* [[questioning_heart]]

h4 See also

* [[dialogue]]
* [[text]]
Updated by TitanRax20 Tue, Mar 28 '23, 21:03
V3 A [b]question[/b] is an interrogative statement, or expression used to request information.

This tag is used when a question is present in the image. May be shown as text or pictographics.

Punctuation only remarks such as [[?]], [[!?]], or [[...?]] use their respective tags instead, and do not count as a question. Conversely, a question with such punctuation should not use those punctuation tags with the exception of [[ellipsis]] usage, which may always be tagged.

Questions that end with !? that are not only punctuation should also be tagged as [[interrobang_exclamation]].

[b]Categories[/b]

Questions fall under the umbrella term asking. More concepts can be found there.

[b]General question[/b]

[i]General questions have yes, or no answers.[/i]

* [[yes-no_question]]

[b]Choice question[/b]

[i]Choice questions ask to choose between two or more possibilities.[/i]

* [[choice_question]]

[b]Special question[/b]

[i]Special questions are called special, because they require a more detailed response than a general question. A special question begins with a question word.[/i]

* [[asking_how]]
* [[asking_what]]
* [[asking_when]]
* [[asking_where]]
* [[asking_who]] - Also whom, whose etc.
* [[asking_why]]

[b]Tag questions[/b]
[i]Tag questions are attached to ends of statements and ask for clarity, agreement, or confirmation of the statement.[/i]

* [[tag_question]]

[b]Conditional question[/b]
[i]This category includes what are know as what if statements. These types of questions mainly involve hypothetical scenarios.[/i]

* [[conditional_question]]

[b]Indirect question[/b]
[i]Indirect questions are essentially statements that contain an embedded question.[/i]

[b]Other[/b]

[i]There are questions that don't cleanly fit into any of the aforementioned categories, at least not by how we tag them. One such example are statements that are used in a questioning manner. Some of these fit into a specific category, but others leave it unclear and ambiguous what is being asked. This form of question may be tagged as questioning_tone and may overlap with other question categories.[/i]

[b]Question target[/b]

The prefix asking is preferred over questioning.

* [[asking_another]]
* [[asking_self]]
* [[asking_viewer]]

h4 Related tags

* [[answer]] - A response to a question.

h4 Related themes

* [[ask_blog]]
* [[questioning_tone]]
* [[questioning_heart]]

h4 See also

* [[dialogue]]
* [[text]]
Updated by TitanRax20 Tue, Mar 28 '23, 21:03
V2 A [b]question[/b] is an interrogative statement, or expression used to request information.

This tag is used when a question is present in the image. May be shown as text or pictographics.

Punctuation only remarks such as [[?]], [[!?]], or [[...?]] use their respective tags instead, and do not count as a question. Conversely, a question with such punctuation should not use those punctuation tags with the exception of [[ellipsis]] usage, which may always be tagged.

Questions that end with !? that are not only punctuation should also be tagged as interrobang_exclamation.

[b]Categories[/b]

Questions fall under the umbrella term asking. More concepts can be found there.

[b]General question[/b]

[i]General questions have yes, or no answers.[/i]

* [[yes-no_question]]

[b]Choice question[/b]

[i]Choice questions ask to choose between two or more possibilities.[/i]

* [[choice_question]]

[b]Special question[/b]

[i]Special questions are called special, because they require a more detailed response than a general question. A special question begins with a question word.[/i]

* [[asking_how]]
* [[asking_what]]
* [[asking_when]]
* [[asking_where]]
* [[asking_who]] - Also whom, whose etc.
* [[asking_why]]

[b]Tag questions[/b]
[i]Tag questions are attached to ends of statements and ask for clarity, agreement, or confirmation of the statement.[/i]

* [[tag_question]]

[b]Conditional question[/b]
[i]This category includes what are know as what if statements. These types of questions mainly involve hypothetical scenarios.[/i]

* [[conditional_question]]

[b]Indirect question[/b]
[i]Indirect questions are essentially statements that contain an embedded question.[/i]

[b]Other[/b]

[i]There are questions that don't cleanly fit into any of the aforementioned categories, at least not by how we tag them. One such example are statements that are used in a questioning manner. Some of these fit into a specific category, but others leave it unclear and ambiguous what is being asked. This form of question may be tagged as questioning_tone and may overlap with other question categories.[/i]

[b]Question target[/b]

The prefix asking is preferred over questioning.

* [[asking_another]]
* [[asking_self]]
* [[asking_viewer]]

h4 Related tags

* [[answer]] - A response to a question.

h4 Related themes

* [[ask_blog]]
* [[questioning_tone]]
* [[questioning_heart]]

h4 See also

* [[dialogue]]
* [[text]]
Updated by TitanRax20 Tue, Mar 28 '23, 21:01
V1 A [b]question[/b] is an interrogative statement, or expression used to request information.

This tag is used when a question is present in the image. May be shown as text or pictographics.

Punctuation only remarks such as [[?]], [[!?]], or [[...?]] use their respective tags instead, and do not count as a question. Conversely, a question with such punctuation should not use those punctuation tags with the exception of [[ellipsis]] usage, which may always be tagged.

Questions that end with !? that are not only punctuation should also be tagged as interrobang_exclamation.

[b]Categories[/b]

Questions fall under the umbrella term asking. More concepts can be found there.

[b]General question[/b]

[i]General questions have yes, or no answers.[/i]

* [[yes-no_question]]

[b]Choice question[/b]

[i]Choice questions ask to choose between two or more possibilities.[/i]

* [[choice_question]]

[b]Special question[/b]

[i]Special questions are called special, because they require a more detailed response than a general question. A special question begins with a question word.[/i]

* [[asking_how]]
* [[asking_what]]
* [[asking_when]]
* [[asking_where]]
* [[asking_who]] - Also whom, whose etc.
* [[asking_why]]

[b]Tag questions[/b]
[i]Tag questions are attached to ends of statements and ask for clarity, agreement, or confirmation of the statement.[/i]

* [[tag_question]]

[b]Conditional question[/b]
[i]This category includes what are know as what if statements. These types of questions mainly involve hypothetical scenarios.[/i]

* [[conditional_question]]

[b]Indirect question[/b]
[i]Indirect questions are essentially statements that contain an embedded question.[/i]

[b]Other[/b]

[i]There are questions that don't cleanly fit into any of the aforementioned categories, at least not by how we tag them. One such example are statements that are used in a questioning manner. Some of these fit into a specific category, but others leave it unclear and ambiguous what is being asked. This form of question may be tagged as questioning_tone and may overlap with other question categories.[/i]

[b]Question target[/b]

The prefix asking is preferred over questioning.

* [[asking_another]]
* [[asking_self]]
* [[asking_viewer]]

h4 Related tags

* [[answer]] - A response to a question.

h4 Related themes

* [[ask_blog]]
* [[questioning_tone]]
* [[questioning_heart]]

See also

* [[dialogue]]
* [[text]]
Updated by TitanRax20 Tue, Mar 28 '23, 21:00