Definition:
A sentence that reports a question and ends with a period rather than a question mark. Contrast with Direct Question.
See also:
Examples and Observations:
- "Everywhere I go I'm asked if I think the university stifles writers. My opinion is that they don't stifle enough of them."(Flannery O'Connor)
- "When I was crossing the border into Canada, they asked if I had any firearms with me. I said, 'Well, what do you need?'"(Steven Wright)
- "I wonder if other dogs think poodles are members of a weird religious cult."(Rita Rudner)
- "Indirect questions do not close with a question mark but with a period. Like direct questions they demand a response, but they are expressed as declarations without the formal characteristics of a question. That is, they have no inversion, no interrogative words, and no special intonation. We can imagine, for example, a situation in which one person asks another, 'Are you going downtown?' (a direct question). The person addressed does not hear and a bystander says, 'He asked if you were going downtown.' That is an indirect question. It requires an answer, but it is expressed as a statement and so is closed by a period, not a query."(Thomas S. Kane, The New Oxford Guide to Writing. Oxford Univ. Press, 1988)
- The process of transforming [a] direct question into an indirect question is fourfold:
- Eliminate the punctuation: quotation marks, question marks, and comma before the question. End the whole sentence with a period.
- Insert the word if or whether before the question. Or, if the original question already contains a subordinator, retain it. . . .
- Adjust all necessary tenses and pronouns.
- Invert the subject and verb in the question back to normal sentence order--first subject, then verb.
(Andrea B. Geffner, Business English. Barron's, 2004)
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