Version at: 22/10/2018, 00:50 vs. version at: 22/10/2018, 00:51 | ||
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1 | 1 | #How to Write Dialogues |
2 | 2 | |
3 | 3 | Go back to [tatoeba.org](http://tatoeba.org). |
4 | 4 | |
5 | 5 | ##Why Write Dialogues |
6 | 6 | |
7 | 7 | In order to provide context, sometimes single sentences are not enough. |
8 | 8 | |
9 | 9 | Dialogues can also be used to show how non-sentences can be used as responses. |
10 | 10 | |
11 | * [#1431300] "Is he lying?" "Obviously." (marcelostockle) | |
12 | * [#5401699] "Can I join you?" "Sure." (sarefo) | |
13 | * [#6229650] "Who was there?" "Only Tom." (CK) | |
14 | * [#6446394] "How do you feel?" "Better." (Hybrid) | |
15 | * [#4628683] "Are you tired?" "Not really." (Lazovic) | |
16 | ||
11 | * [#1431300] "Is he lying?" "Obviously." | |
12 | * [#5401699] "Can I join you?" "Sure." | |
13 | * [#6229650] "Who was there?" "Only Tom." | |
14 | * [#6446394] "How do you feel?" "Better." | |
15 | * [#4628683] "Are you tired?" "Not really." | |
17 | 16 | |
18 | 17 | ##Formatting Standards - Examples |
19 | 18 | |
20 | 19 | **English** - Put each sentence in (double) quotes. We use "straight" quotes and not "curly" quotes on tatoeba.org. |
21 | 20 | |
22 | 21 | "I caught a bad cold." "That's too bad." |
23 | 22 | |
24 | 23 | **Japanese** - Put each sentence in quotes 「 」without 。 There is no additional space between these quotes 」「. |
25 | 24 | |
26 | 25 | 「悪い風邪を引きました」「それはいけませんね」 |
27 | 26 | |
28 | 27 | **French.** You should use « Sentence 1. » « Sentence 2. » |
29 | 28 | |
30 | 29 | **German.** Use the following format: „Ich bin ganz stark erkältet.“ – „Das ist aber ärgerlich!“ |
31 | 30 | |
32 | 31 | The dash must be a dash (Alt + 0150), not a hyphen. It should ideally be preceded by a non-breaking space (Alt + 255). Alt codes for the opening and closing typographical quotation marks used in German are Alt + 0132 and Alt + 0147. |
33 | 32 | |
34 | 33 | ##Others - (In Progress - Just Notes) |
35 | 34 | |
36 | 35 | NOTE: Perhaps most languages that use the quote character ("), are using the same standard in the Tatoeba Corpus as English does. I've checked the following languages. |
37 | 36 | |
38 | 37 | **Esperanto** |
39 | 38 | |
40 | 39 | (No native speakers, but ...) |
41 | 40 | |
42 | 41 | 520 examples use this format. |
43 | 42 | "SENTENCE_1" "SENTENCE_2" |
44 | 43 | |
45 | 44 | 184 examples use this format. |
46 | 45 | "SENTENCE_1" - "SENTENCE_2" |
47 | 46 | |
48 | 47 | **Hebrew** |
49 | 48 | |
50 | 49 | 193 examples by native speakers use "SENTENCE_1" "SENTENCE_2" |
51 | 50 | |
52 | 51 | ? examples by native speakers use "SENTENCE_1" - "SENTENCE_2" |
53 | 52 | (I can't easily check RTL languages for this.) |
54 | 53 | |
55 | 54 | **Portuguese** |
56 | 55 | |
57 | 56 | 606 examples by native speakers use "SENTENCE_1" "SENTENCE_2" (Same as English) |
58 | 57 | |
59 | 58 | 0 examples by native speakers use "SENTENCE_1" - "SENTENCE_2" |
60 | 59 | |
61 | 60 | **Spanish** |
62 | 61 | |
63 | 62 | 383 examples by native speakers use "SENTENCE_1" "SENTENCE_2" (Same as English) |
64 | 63 | |
65 | 64 | 6 examples by native speakers use "SENTENCE_1" - "SENTENCE_2" |
66 | 65 | |
67 | 66 | ## Reference |
68 | 67 | |
69 | 68 | [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Non-English_usage_of_quotation_marks](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Non-English_usage_of_quotation_marks) |
70 | 69 | |
71 | 70 | This might be a good guide. However, the Tatoeba Corpus has adopted "straight" quotes as the standard rather than "curly" quotes. |
72 | 71 | |
73 | 72 | [http://french.stackexchange.com/questions/115/is-it-necessary-to-use-guillemets-when-quoting-in-french-or-may-one-use-english](http://french.stackexchange.com/questions/115/is-it-necessary-to-use-guillemets-when-quoting-in-french-or-may-one-use-english) |
74 | 73 | |
75 | 74 | French seems to use 2 different standards. |
76 | 75 | |
diff view generated by jsdifflib |
Version at: 22/10/2018, 00:50
#How to Write Dialogues Go back to [tatoeba.org](http://tatoeba.org). ##Why Write Dialogues In order to provide context, sometimes single sentences are not enough. Dialogues can also be used to show how non-sentences can be used as responses. * [#1431300] "Is he lying?" "Obviously." (marcelostockle) * [#5401699] "Can I join you?" "Sure." (sarefo) * [#6229650] "Who was there?" "Only Tom." (CK) * [#6446394] "How do you feel?" "Better." (Hybrid) * [#4628683] "Are you tired?" "Not really." (Lazovic) ##Formatting Standards - Examples **English** - Put each sentence in (double) quotes. We use "straight" quotes and not "curly" quotes on tatoeba.org. "I caught a bad cold." "That's too bad." **Japanese** - Put each sentence in quotes 「 」without 。 There is no additional space between these quotes 」「. 「悪い風邪を引きました」「それはいけませんね」 **French.** You should use « Sentence 1. » « Sentence 2. » **German.** Use the following format: „Ich bin ganz stark erkältet.“ – „Das ist aber ärgerlich!“ The dash must be a dash (Alt + 0150), not a hyphen. It should ideally be preceded by a non-breaking space (Alt + 255). Alt codes for the opening and closing typographical quotation marks used in German are Alt + 0132 and Alt + 0147. ##Others - (In Progress - Just Notes) NOTE: Perhaps most languages that use the quote character ("), are using the same standard in the Tatoeba Corpus as English does. I've checked the following languages. **Esperanto** (No native speakers, but ...) 520 examples use this format. "SENTENCE_1" "SENTENCE_2" 184 examples use this format. "SENTENCE_1" - "SENTENCE_2" **Hebrew** 193 examples by native speakers use "SENTENCE_1" "SENTENCE_2" ? examples by native speakers use "SENTENCE_1" - "SENTENCE_2" (I can't easily check RTL languages for this.) **Portuguese** 606 examples by native speakers use "SENTENCE_1" "SENTENCE_2" (Same as English) 0 examples by native speakers use "SENTENCE_1" - "SENTENCE_2" **Spanish** 383 examples by native speakers use "SENTENCE_1" "SENTENCE_2" (Same as English) 6 examples by native speakers use "SENTENCE_1" - "SENTENCE_2" ## Reference [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Non-English_usage_of_quotation_marks](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Non-English_usage_of_quotation_marks) This might be a good guide. However, the Tatoeba Corpus has adopted "straight" quotes as the standard rather than "curly" quotes. [http://french.stackexchange.com/questions/115/is-it-necessary-to-use-guillemets-when-quoting-in-french-or-may-one-use-english](http://french.stackexchange.com/questions/115/is-it-necessary-to-use-guillemets-when-quoting-in-french-or-may-one-use-english) French seems to use 2 different standards.
version at: 22/10/2018, 00:51
#How to Write Dialogues Go back to [tatoeba.org](http://tatoeba.org). ##Why Write Dialogues In order to provide context, sometimes single sentences are not enough. Dialogues can also be used to show how non-sentences can be used as responses. * [#1431300] "Is he lying?" "Obviously." * [#5401699] "Can I join you?" "Sure." * [#6229650] "Who was there?" "Only Tom." * [#6446394] "How do you feel?" "Better." * [#4628683] "Are you tired?" "Not really." ##Formatting Standards - Examples **English** - Put each sentence in (double) quotes. We use "straight" quotes and not "curly" quotes on tatoeba.org. "I caught a bad cold." "That's too bad." **Japanese** - Put each sentence in quotes 「 」without 。 There is no additional space between these quotes 」「. 「悪い風邪を引きました」「それはいけませんね」 **French.** You should use « Sentence 1. » « Sentence 2. » **German.** Use the following format: „Ich bin ganz stark erkältet.“ – „Das ist aber ärgerlich!“ The dash must be a dash (Alt + 0150), not a hyphen. It should ideally be preceded by a non-breaking space (Alt + 255). Alt codes for the opening and closing typographical quotation marks used in German are Alt + 0132 and Alt + 0147. ##Others - (In Progress - Just Notes) NOTE: Perhaps most languages that use the quote character ("), are using the same standard in the Tatoeba Corpus as English does. I've checked the following languages. **Esperanto** (No native speakers, but ...) 520 examples use this format. "SENTENCE_1" "SENTENCE_2" 184 examples use this format. "SENTENCE_1" - "SENTENCE_2" **Hebrew** 193 examples by native speakers use "SENTENCE_1" "SENTENCE_2" ? examples by native speakers use "SENTENCE_1" - "SENTENCE_2" (I can't easily check RTL languages for this.) **Portuguese** 606 examples by native speakers use "SENTENCE_1" "SENTENCE_2" (Same as English) 0 examples by native speakers use "SENTENCE_1" - "SENTENCE_2" **Spanish** 383 examples by native speakers use "SENTENCE_1" "SENTENCE_2" (Same as English) 6 examples by native speakers use "SENTENCE_1" - "SENTENCE_2" ## Reference [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Non-English_usage_of_quotation_marks](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Non-English_usage_of_quotation_marks) This might be a good guide. However, the Tatoeba Corpus has adopted "straight" quotes as the standard rather than "curly" quotes. [http://french.stackexchange.com/questions/115/is-it-necessary-to-use-guillemets-when-quoting-in-french-or-may-one-use-english](http://french.stackexchange.com/questions/115/is-it-necessary-to-use-guillemets-when-quoting-in-french-or-may-one-use-english) French seems to use 2 different standards.