I’m still waiting for the sequel, Who Fricasseed Roger Rabbit?
Trekker seems to be under the impression that the only way to identify a question is by a question mark at the end. I can see the point he is making, but has anyone actually ever come across a situation like that, where the sentence:
I like the film "Who Framed Roger Rabbit?"
is intended as a question, and has absolutely no context associated with it by which to parse its real meaning? If people are throwing out sentences like that and expecting them to be understood, they deserve not to be. The answer to how to overcome this problem is not to write such sentences.
I do not disagree with what the rules are, just stating that in today's world they could probably use some adjustment in order to work in a modern world where we have the names of things like episode titles that have question marks in them and people talking with irony exists.
Nah, I think we're fine using italics for just about everything. Keep in mind that most of these rules are old and haven't really been updated in quite some time. I think in the age of the internet, italics (or underlining) should be good.Which opens a whole other can of worms, namely the rules about using italics vs. quotation marks for titles.And really, all of this would be solved by getting rid of the quotes and simply typing the title in italics.
I learned to use italics for novels, plays, motion pictures, and television series. Quotation marks for short fiction pieces, chapter titles, individual episodes of TV shows. For poems, I can’t remember what the hell I’m supposed to use.
Trekker seems to be under the impression that the only way to identify a question is by a question mark at the end. I can see the point he is making, but has anyone actually ever come across a situation like that, where the sentence:
I like the film "Who Framed Roger Rabbit?"
is intended as a question, and has absolutely no context associated with it by which to parse its real meaning? If people are throwing out sentences like that and expecting them to be understood, they deserve not to be. The answer to how to overcome this problem is not to write such sentences.
Posted by Trekker4747:
And, of course, when writing with a pen and paper it's nearly impossible to write in italics and while style-rules say that in this situation movie and book titles are underlined, the names of articles, chapters in a book or episode titles go in quotes so we lead back in to the possibility of confusion.
And if it'd cause a read to go through a sentence that starts as a statement and ends with a question mark even it takes a moment for the person to stop and think about what they have just read then it can lead to confusion.
So, since the episode "Who Watches the Watchers" stylistically is properly in quotes, it could be confusing (if even for a moment) if it was in a statement for two reasons.
I like the episode "Who Watches the Watchers."
1. The sentence, being a statement, ends in a period, even though there's clearly a question in it.
If the episode title was properly punctuated:
I like the episode "Who Watches the Watchers?"
Now we have a sentence that is a statement, but ends with a question mark properly placed both stylistically inside the quote and with the episode title. But it may lead to some confusion for a reader who may think the original writer of the sentence just made a statement a question.
Hell, how many times on this very board do people make a thread title that's a statement but ends it with a question mark?
You're right of course. 100 years ago titles never had question marks in them, and nobody was ever sarcastic.I do not disagree with what the rules are, just stating that in today's world they could probably use some adjustment in order to work in a modern world where we have the names of things like episode titles that have question marks in them and people talking with irony exists.
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