Hi, I think you'd want to look at those links you provided, if they explain what interrogatives and imperatives are. The sentence at the Korean language article was plainly a question, therefore an interrogative. It's just a coincidence that it looks like an imperative. --Kjoonlee 15:42, 9 July 2007 (UTC)
This is simply not true. Questions that can be answered with a yes/no do not need question words. Also, think of *“안녕하십시오!” vs. “안녕하십니까?”. The latter is the greeting, and it is definitely a yes/no question, therefore an interrogative. *안녕하십시오! is the imperative, and there's no coincidence here. --Kjoonlee 18:01, 9 July 2007 (UTC)
Although they are made of the same phonemes, their syntactic structure couldn't be any more different. Compare 안녕하십시오! vs 안녕하십니까? again.. I'm telling you again, 하세요 is just a coincidence.. Ask at Talk:Korean language if you like. --Kjoonlee 18:05, 9 July 2007 (UTC)
Sigh.. intonation is not phonemic. Intonation is not segmental. Intonation is suprasegmental. And I said that 하세요! and 하세요? are very very different, not the same. You were the one who said that 하세요! and 하세요? were the same. --Kjoonlee 18:33, 9 July 2007 (UTC)
You said that languages are never a coincidence, but they are all full of coincidences. Just look at false friend and false cognate. --Kjoonlee 18:36, 9 July 2007 (UTC)
Hi, writing syllable-final ㄹ as [l] makes sense, since syllable-final consonants have the articulators staying in touch until voicing ends, kind of like how unreleased stops work. Keep in mind that [r] is a trill, and [ɾ] is a tap; neither have the articulators staying in full contact with each other. We are dealing with phonetic transcriptions in square brackets, and what I have described are actual speech phenomena; they are consistent.
I have trouble parsing what you mean, but we do avoid representing the ㄹ in 알람 as a syllable-final flap by writing it as [l]. --Kjoonlee 16:22, 9 July 2007 (UTC)
This is simply not true, because I'm a native speaker and 랄 in my case is [ɾal]. I use the same [ɾ] as when I say “어라라”, even syllable-initially. Several other people in my phonetics class also used the same allophone. I'd say it's trivially observable, once you are familiar with articulatory phonetics. People who aren't familiar with phonetics, especially native speakers will have a hard time differentiating allophones. Maybe you've fallen into that trap? --Kjoonlee 18:14, 9 July 2007 (UTC)
Sorry for nitpicking again, but some people pronounce “밭에” with an interdental [t̪] instead of just a dental [t̪] and I've never seen anyone with a dental ㄹ. --Kjoonlee 18:24, 9 July 2007 (UTC)
The fact that 가, 가요, 가세요 overlap is a coincidence. All the others are different. --Kjoonlee 18:42, 9 July 2007 (UTC)
((unblock|reason=Your reason here :))
. Acroterion (talk) 17:10, 14 May 2015 (UTC)Jkrdsr (block log • active blocks • global blocks • contribs • deleted contribs • filter log • creation log • change block settings • unblock • checkuser (log))
Request reason:
I am being bullied by the following users NeilN, Alakzi, and Peter238
Decline reason:
No you are not. Your recent edit history makes it abundantly clear that you are WP:NOTHERE to work cooperatively to build an encyclopedia. OhNoitsJamie Talk 17:55, 14 May 2015 (UTC)
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