?
See also: Appendix:Variations of "?"
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Translingual
Etymology
? may derive from Qo, with the Q written over the o, an abbreviation of Latin quaestio (“question”), placed at the end of a question to mark it as such.[1]
Punctuation mark
?
- Marks a preceding passage written in Latin script as a question.
- (comics) Used by itself to convey that a character is confused.
- Character #1: "I have no time to explain! Have you seen a Big Bad Wolf blowing down various houses?"
- Character #2: "?"
- For the reversed question mark used in some right-to-left languages (including Arabic and Persian), see ؟.
Symbol
?
- A placeholder for an unknown word, phrase, text, or numerical value.
- 2009, Terry Stickels, Math Puzzles and Brainteasers, Grades 3-5: Over 300 Puzzles that Teach Math and Problem-Solving Skills (in English), John Wiley & Sons, →ISBN, page 6:
- What is the next number in the sequence below?
- 1 4 9 16 25 36 ?
-
- (chess) In algebraic notation, marks a bad move.
- (programming) A wildcard for one character in query language.
- (programming) The ternary operator in some programming languages.
- (regular expressions) Detects zero or one occurences of the preceding element.
- The string
colou?r
matches both "color" and "colour".
- The string
- (networking) In a URL, begins a query string (a series of data formatted as field-value pairs).
Usage notes
- Its English name is variously question mark, interrogation mark, interrogation point, eroteme.
Quotations
For quotations of use of this term, see Citations:?.
Derived terms
See also
- dashes ( ‒ ) ( – ) ( — ) ( ― )
- ellipsis ( … )
- exclamation mark ( ! )
- fraction slash ( ⁄ )
- guillemets ( « » )
- hyphen ( - ) ( ‐ )
- interpunct ( · )
- interrobang (rare) ( ‽ )
- parentheses ( ( ) )
- period (US) or full stop (UK) ( . )
- question mark ( ? )
- quotation marks (formal) ( ‘ ’ ) ( “ ” )
- quotation marks (informal, Computing) ( " ) ( ' )
References
- Alexander Humez, 1987, A B C et cetera: the life & times of the Roman alphabet
English
Noun
? (plural ?s)
- (text messaging) A question.
- i hav a ? 4 u (I have a question for you)
- objects seen/shaped as the question mark
- a ? block (a question-mark block)
Spanish
Punctuation mark
¿ ?
Usage notes
As SMS messaging and other forms of electronic communication have become more common, some Spanish-speakers use only ? for questions and ! for exclamations, leaving out the initial typographical mark. This is considered non-standard usage.
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