Opinions differ as to whether a polite request of the type May I . . . , Would you . . . or Will you . . . requires the question mark. However, a question mark will look out of place after longer requests of this kind, especially if the sentence embodies straightforward affirmative elements:
Although the question mark is normally omitted after indirect questions, one may be added if the sentence has the force of a request:
Occasionally a question will incorporate an exclamatory element. The writer must then decide whether the interrogative or the exclamatory element is to be given greater prominence:
A question mark in parentheses (italicized in square brackets in quoted material) is inserted after information about which the writer is uncertain:
Indicate missing digits with a question mark:
See Chapter 8 Quotations and Quotation Marks for the use of the question mark with quotation marks and other punctuation.
© Services publics et Approvisionnement Canada, 2025
TERMIUM Plus®, el banco de datos terminológicos y lingüísticos del Gobierno de Canadá
Ayuda a la redacción – The Canadian Style
Un producto de la Oficina de Traducciones