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Date:      2 Jun 2000 20:00:20 +0200
From:      naddy@mips.inka.de (Christian Weisgerber)
To:        freebsd-chat@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: Punctuation conventions
Message-ID:  <8h8snk$1irg$1@bigeye.mips.inka.de>
References:  <006d01bfcc13$1b573c10$2969a0d0@leviathan> <3936A504.9741.9963DB1@localhost>

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Freddie Cash <fcash@bigfoot.com> wrote:

> This may just be for Canadian French, but in my 13 years of study and 
> use, I've never seen a space before a '?' or a '!' or any other 
> punctuation mark.

Randomly picking three (European) French books from the shelf, I
see a space being used before '?' and '!' in two of them.  You can
also observe the practice over in the fr.* groups or quite often
in English articles posted by French speakers.

> As for the different `opening and closing' marks, what was the point to 
> those??  I always found them to be very annoying and to break the flow of 
> the type.  ``just looks wrong''

Excuse me, but what's the point of the American quotation marks?
Why are *they* different?  And who introduced the bizarre concept
of repeating the opening marks at every new paragraph?  Just looks
wrong.

More to the point, if you expand your horizon a bit, you'll learn
that every language (or even major national variation) has its own
typographic conventions.  Asking about their point and declaring
the ones you happen to be used to as the right way is profoundly
silly.

American English quotating marks are ``text'', the British seem to
prefer `text'.  The French use << text >>, German has >>text<< or
,,text``.  French and Russian introduce direct speech with a dash.
And so on.  If you look closely, you may notice such subtle
differences as opening curlies having their knob at the top or
bottom end, etc.

-- 
Christian "naddy" Weisgerber                          naddy@mips.inka.de



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