Linguix Blog

Question Marks: Rules and Examples

Quite commonly used, the rules regarding question marks are very little and very easy to use.

Uses of Question Marks

Question marks are used to punctuate and end interrogative sentences. Direct questions are commonly introduced with who, what, when, where or why. However, every question isn’t framed as a direct question. Sometimes, declarative or imperative sentences can be framed as a question by adding a question mark to signify surprise, doubt, or disbelief.

Example: I’m sorry, who are you?

You want to drop out of school and become a comedian?

Question Marks with Quotation Marks

While placing a question mark at the end of an interrogative sentence is simple enough, it can get confusing when it is placed near other punctuations.

If the question mark belongs only to a phrase inside quotation marks, it should be placed inside the quotations. If the question mark pertains to the whole sentence, place it at the end of the sentence.

Example: Ben asked, “what are you doing?”

Don’t you want to finish studying “from your notes”?

If a quoted phrase contains a question and the whole sentence is also a question, place the question mark at the end of the sentence. The same holds true if a quotation containing a question. If there is a quoted phrase inside an interrogative sentence, use only one question mark.

Example: She blankly stated, “the CEO yelled at him for ‘doing a poor job’ on the project.”

“Why did you ‘do a poor job’ on this important project”?

Question Marks and Parentheses

Similar to the rules regarding quotation marks, place the question mark at the end of the sentence if the whole sentence is interrogative in nature. However, if only the parenthetical phrase is a question, place the question mark within parentheses.

Example: How did Ben climb the wall (without getting hurt)?

I heard that Ben climbed a wall (and didn’t get hurt?).

Question Marks for Indirect Questions

One type of question that shouldn’t end in a question mark is an indirect question. Placed within declarative sentences, it can be hard to decide if a sentence is an indirect question or a direct question. However, in such situations, it’s acceptable to treat it as an indirect question.

Example: Ben wondered which wall he should try to climb.

Everyone pondered why Ben was so interested in climbing a wall.

More Than a Question Mark

There are times when a simple question mark just doesn’t seem to be enough. Especially for questions with an undertone of surprise and excitement, it is common to see the use of interrobangs. A mix of question marks and exclamation points, interrobangs should only be used in informal or casual writing. When writing, if you want to inject enthusiasm into a question without using interrobangs, rewrite the question to avoid its use.

Example: Did you know? Ben successfully climbed that wall and won the competition!

Ben successfully climbed that wall and won the competition!?

Quick punctuation tips for questions

Use a question mark to end direct questions and any sentence framed to ask something (including sentences that show surprise or disbelief). For statements that merely report a question, keep the sentence declarative and finish with a period.

When punctuation meets other marks: place the question mark inside quotation marks if it belongs only to the quoted material; place it after the quotation or parentheses when it applies to the whole sentence. If both the quote and the surrounding sentence are questions, use a single question mark at the end.

Reserve mixed marks like !? or the interrobang for informal contexts. In formal writing, prefer rewriting the sentence to convey tone without relying on combined punctuation.

FAQ

Can I use more than one question mark for emphasis?

Multiple question marks are informal and typically inappropriate in formal writing. Use one question mark and consider revising wording or adding explanatory words to convey stronger emotion.

Do indirect questions ever take a question mark?

No – indirect questions are embedded within statements (e.g., “She asked whether he would come.”) and should end with a period, not a question mark.

Where exactly does the question mark go with quotes and parentheses?

If the quoted material itself is a question, put the question mark inside the quotation marks. If the entire sentence is a question but the quotation is not, place the question mark after the closing quotation or parenthesis.

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