punctus interrogativus
English
Etymology
From Medieval Latin pūnctus interrogātīvus (“question mark”).
Pronunciation
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /ˌpʌŋktəs ɪntəɹɒɡəˈtiːvəs/, /ˌpʌŋktəs ɪntəɹɒɡəˈtaɪvəs/, /ˌpʌŋktəs ɪntəˈɹɒɡətɪvəs/
- (General American) IPA(key): /ˌpʌŋktəs ɪntəɹɑɡəˈtivəs/, /ˌpʌŋktəs ɪntəɹɑɡəˈtaɪvəs/, /ˌpʌŋktəs ɪntəˈɹɑɡətɪvəs/
Noun
- (palaeography) The medieval ancestor of the modern question mark (approximately ~̣).
- 2000, Jane Roberts, Janet Laughland Nelson, editors, Essays on Anglo-Saxon and Related Themes in Memory of Lynne Grundy, King's College (University of London), →ISBN, page 537:
- […] manuscript punctuation has a punctus elevatus after the interjections and a punctus interrogativus at the end of the sentence.
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