On 12/31/2016 11:21 AM, mayqel qunenoS wrote:
however, there is a major difference between the {-'a'} and punctuation in general.
if you are reading a sentence which contains a verb bearing the {-'a'}, or a sentence starting with any question word, there is no way you can't realize instantly that it is a question.
but if you are trying to read a passage with no commas and periods, then good luck, especially in klingon.
one of the reasons I refuse to read paq'batlh is exactly this lack of punctuation. the problem isn't the lack of question marks; its having to be a psychic in order to understand where everything starts and stops.
whenever voragh quotes the paq'batlh, and I am trying to read just a few sentences, I feel like smashing my phone against the wall.
I can't help but hear myself saying "how the f*** am I supposed to understand this" ?
"There is a major difference" "Is there a major difference" In English, there is a major difference between the same sentence in indicative and interrogative moods, as I have just illustrated. You can tell which is a statement and which is a question. So why do we have the question mark? Why do some languages use the question mark twice, once at the beginning and once at the end? So basically, we're asking why you won't follow the conventions of punctuation that society has agreed upon for a long time. I find your English-language text more difficult to read than someone else's, because you don't capitalize so it's hard to find the beginnings of sentences; you put spaces before your end-of-sentence punctuation which makes it hard to find the ends of sentences; you don't use apostrophes consistently so it's hard to tell the difference between /its/ and /it's. / I've seen worse on the Internet: I once knew someone who put line breaks throughout his words like this because he thought it made things easier to read. Everyone yelled at him and told him it was actually harder to read written this way. He didn't believe them and kept on doing it because he was convinced his way was better than what they had learned. Whether or not it was better nobody else could read it easily because they hadn't been taught to read like this. OR WHY DON'T WE STICK TO ONE TYPEFACE? WHY DO WE MIX MAJUSCULES AND MINUSCULES WHEN ONE SIZE OF LETTERS WILL DO? it's because over the centuries we have found minuscule lettering is easier to read in large blocks, but majuscule lettering works better for emphasis, and emphasizing certain words in sentences by capitalizing them. I don't know the reason they chose to present /paq'batlh/ without punctuation. It probably has something to do with trying to recreate a spoken song rather than a prose text; you don't usually speak punctuation unless you're Victor Borge. -- SuStel http://trimboli.name