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Basic knowledge of Chinese in the second grade of primary school: how to use question marks correctly

Such as: hey? Why is my pen missing? Huh? How could it be him? (3) There is generally only one question mark, which is placed at the end of the sentence and between the items. ...

Related: Quanzhou Experimental Primary School Chinese Volume 8 >> Detailed Teaching: Teaching Design of Practice Class >:> Detailed Teaching: Teaching Design of Practice Class >:> Detailed ◇ Unit Training Questions of Chinese Grade Three >> Detailed question mark is a pause symbol after a question is asked, which mostly indicates interrogative tone. The exam often involves the following points: (1) If there is a title in the question, no matter what the title is, a question mark will be used at the end of the sentence. Xiao Liu, have you ever been to Shanghai? Xiao Liu, have you ever been to Shanghai? (2) When interjections such as "ah" and "yi" are used with interrogative mood, they are also interrogative sentences, followed by question marks. Such as: hey? Why is my pen missing? Huh? How could it be him? (3) Generally, there is only one question mark, which is placed at the end of the whole sentence, and items are separated by commas. Tomorrow's trip, will you go or not? (4) Should question marks be used? It depends on the whole sentence, whether the question is really asked, whether there is a questioning tone, and whether there are interrogative words such as "who", "what" and "how". Some sentences are interrogative sentences, and some sentences are not interrogative sentences, so we should distinguish them clearly. Who is he? I don't know who he is. Nobody knows who he is. 1 sentence is a question, which should be a question mark, while 2 and 3 sentences can be used as "Who is he?" It only appears as an object in these two sentences, or it is no longer an independent sentence in these two sentences, but only a sentence component, so the whole sentence is not a question, so you can't use a question mark. 1 Are you going or is he going? I haven't decided whether you or he will go. 1 sentence is a question. There is no doubt that a question mark is used, but in two sentences, "you go or he goes" is the subject of the whole sentence, and the independence of the sentence is cancelled. The whole sentence is not interrogative, so you can't use question marks, you can only use commas. (5) Language units quoted locally generally do not need punctuation. If they are question marks, they can be kept. As soon as I entered the door, I saw a message, "Did you waste time today?" Slogan. (6) Some imperative sentences that express the tone of the merchant can also use question marks at the end of the sentence. Would you please come in?