1.2. Interrogatives
The term interrogative refers to a grammatical form that is specialized for the following main uses:
i) to ask whether a certain state of affairs holds
y/n
A: gianni arrive
B: yes
โDid Gianni arrive?โ โYes.โ
ii) to elicit information from the addressee
wh
A: gianni buy what
B: water
โWhat did Gianni buy?โ โWater.โ
iii) to report a doubt:
wh
a. ix1 think palm_up gianni ix buy qartichoke palm_up
โI wonder what Gianni bought.โ
y/n
b. ix1 think ix gianni wine buy done
โI wonder whether Gianni bought wine.โ
It is possible to distinguish between: i) polar interrogatives (sometimes called yes/no interrogatives because they ask whether a certain state of affairs holds or not, so they are naturally answered by โyesโ or โnoโ), ii) alternative interrogatives, which present two or more options for the reply, and iii) content interrogatives, which elicit a more elaborate answer than โyesโ or โnoโ because they are used to ask the addressee to fill in some specific missing information.