Juan es médico. ¿Es Juan médico? yes/no question. ¿De qué trabaja Juan? or ¿Qué profesión tiene Juan? (What's Juan's job? supposing you don't know)
María vive en Miami. ¿Vive María en Miami? ¿Dónde vive María?
By using:
Qué, cómo, dónde, quién, quiénes, cuáles, cuál, cuántos, cuánto, cuánta, cuántos, por qué, para qué, a qué...
These words always have an accent (´), otherwise they have another meaning.
They can be preceded or not by an upside-down question-mark and followed by a normal (?) question-mark:
¿Quién es usted? --- Who are you? (polite singular; direct question)
Vi que venían, mas no supe quiénes eran --- I saw they were coming but I didn't know who they were (indirect question)
Never in correct Spanish:
*Quien es usted?
*Vi que venían, mas no supe quienes eran.
¿Qué desea? Veo que no me dirá qué desea --- What do you wish? I notice you won't tell me what you wish.
Wrong use:
*Que desea? Veo que no me dirá que desea.
* The importance of written accent avoids confusion. Remember that Spanish is a language of vowel intensity, thus, sentences such as: Quien viene (who is coming), que quieren (that / who want), have another meaning in comparison with: Quién viene (Who is coming?), qué quieren (what do they want?). Take into account that the latter can have question marks ¿?, in direct questions. For indirect questions, question marks are not used.
The use of the written accent, in these cases, depends upon the speaker's intention and the context, asking either direct or indirect questions.
To punctuate a question in Spanish you begin with an upside down question mark and end with a question mark. ¿Como te llamas?
You actually write 2 question marks. One at the beginning of your question ¿ , and one at the end: ? So "What's the time?" would be ¿Qué hora es?
Interrogante.
an upside down question mark = ALT + 168
that's a Spanish question mark
An upside down question mark (ยฟ) is used at the beginning of a question in Spanish to denote that a question is being asked. In general, it serves the same purpose as a regular question mark but is specific to the Spanish language.
In Spanish, the question mark (ยฟ) is used at the beginning of a question and the exclamation mark (ยก) is used at the beginning of an exclamation.
"Did" in Spanish is an upside down question mark. There is no "did" word in Spanish. In fact, "do" and others also are upside down question marks.
Questions generally have no periods unless there are abbreviations in them. In English, they end with a question mark. In Spanish, questions start with an inverted question mark and end with a question mark.
The upside down question mark is not a punctuation mark used in the English language. Rather, it is used in Spanish in front of a question, with a regular question mark placed at the end.
An interrogative sentence is a type of sentence that asks a question and uses a question mark at the end.
An interrogative sentence ends with a question mark (?). This punctuation is used to indicate that a question is being asked.
you put an upside down question mark in the beginning and then a regular question mark at the end. Example: ¿Donde esta? The way to do a updside down question mark when typing is: SHIFT+CTRL+ALT+?
Typing a question mark on a normal keyboard is achieved by holding down the shift button and pressing down the question mark button marked '?' simultaneously.
Type. This question should be in spanish-english translations.