Why do all languages share the same intonation for questions?

OmegaMouse@pawb.social to No Stupid Questions@lemmy.world – 76 points –

I could be wrong here, but it seems to me that a common aspect amongst all languages is the tendency to raise the pitch of your voice slightly when asking a question. Especially at the end of a question sentence.

If I'm wrong about this raised pitch being common amongst all languages, at the very least do all languages change their tone slightly to indicate that a question is being asked?

I guess there needs to be some way to indicate what is and isn't a question. Perhaps a higher pitched voice reflects uncertainty. Is this something deep rooted in humans, or just an arbitrary choice when language developed?

56

You are viewing a single comment

They don't.

The general pattern seems cross-linguistically consistent.

It's not even consistent in English.

Yeah - I noticed it after reading your other comment. Fair point.

Coupling it with info from the Mandarin article that I've linked, it seems to apply to declarative (yes-no) questions only.