Questions may be marked by some combination of word order,
morphology, interrogative words, and
intonation. Where languages have one or more
clause type characteristically used to form questions, they are called
interrogative clauses. Open and closed questions are generally distinguished grammatically, with the former identified by the use of
interrogative words. In
English,
German,
French and various other (mostly European) languages, both forms of interrogative are subject to an
inversion of word order between verb and subject. In English, the inversion
is limited to auxiliary verbs, which sometimes necessitates
the addition of the auxiliary do, as in: ::a. Sam reads the newspaper. ::b. Does Sam read the newspaper?
Open questions Open questions are formed by the use of
interrogative words such as, in English,
when,
what, or
which. These stand in as variables representing the unknown information being sought. They may also combine with other words to form interrogative phrases, such as
which shoes in: :Which shoes should I wear to the party? In many languages, including English and most other European languages, the interrogative phrase must (with certain exceptions such as
echo questions) appear at the beginning of the sentence, a phenomenon known as
wh-fronting. In other languages, the interrogative appears in the same position as it would in a corresponding declarative sentence (
in situ). A question may include multiple variables as in: :Whose gifts are in which boxes?
Polar questions Different languages may use different mechanisms to distinguish polar ("yes-no") questions from declarative statements (in addition to the
question mark). English is one of a small number of languages which use word order. Another example is French: Cross-linguistically, the most common method of marking a polar question is with an
interrogative particle, such as the
Japanese ka,
Mandarin ma and
Polish czy. Other languages use verbal morphology, such as the
-n verbal postfix in the
Tunica language. Of the languages examined in the
World Atlas of Language Structures, only one,
Atatláhuca–San Miguel Mixtec, was found to have no distinction between declaratives and polar questions. However it is established that in English
there is a distinction between
assertive rising declaratives and
inquisitive rising declaratives, distinguished by their
prosody.
Request for confirmation and speaker presupposition Questions may be phrased as a request for confirmation for a statement the interrogator already believes to be true. A
tag question is a polar question formed by the addition of an interrogative fragment (the "tag") to a (typically declarative) clause. For example: :You're John, :Let's have a drink, :You remembered the eggs, This form may incorporate speaker's
presupposition when it constitutes a
complex question. Consider a statement :(A) Somebody killed the cat and several questions related to it. :(B) John killed the cat, did he? (tag question) :(C) Was it John who killed the cat? As compared with: :(D) Who killed the cat? Unlike (B), questions (C) and (D) incorporate a presupposition that somebody killed the cat. Question (C) indicates speaker's commitment to the truth of the statement that somebody killed the cat, but no commitment as to whether John did it or did not.
Punctuation In languages written in
Latin,
Cyrillic or certain other scripts, a
question mark at the end of a sentence identifies questions in writing. As with intonation, this feature is not restricted to sentences having the grammatical form of questions – it may also indicate a sentence's
pragmatic function. In
Spanish an additional
inverted mark is placed at the beginning:
¿Cómo está usted? "How are you?". An uncommon variant of the question mark is the
interrobang (‽), which combines the function of the question mark and the
exclamation mark. == Responses and answers ==