Scooby wrote:
Breandán wrote:
Some of it is, and some of it isn't.
For instance, the comma is the same in the situation you asked about.
However, Irish tends to place a space before a question mark or an exclamation mark where English no longer does. On the other hand, that may also be because many works of literature are quite old ...
Wow! That's news to me (about English too). Ya live and learn.
Take a look at
Buntús Cainte or
Deoraíocht.
Is there an official "style guide" or "style manual" for Irish put out by the government or one of the official language bodies? Here's an explanation of what a style guide is:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Style_guideRedwolf may be able to correct me on this, but for American English, the Chicago Manual of Style was recommended to us as a guideline for punctuating American English of a general nature. (This recommends a single
space after a full stop, but scientists prefer (an older tradition of) two spaces after a full stop for clarity. Publishers on the other hand, complain that using two spaces makes "rivers of space" down the page.

And an American co-worker once quipped, "I'm not from Chicago."

)
All official EU documents have to follow the EU style guidelines:
http://publications.europa.eu/code/en/en-360400.htm, but that means using a decimal comma instead of a decimal point, etc., at least in multilingual documents.
Local language style manuals usually take over for specific languages. For example, each brand of English (UK, Australia, Canada) has at least one style guide, sometimes several, including some specialized ones for legal documents, etc. (Across the board, I think the only hard and fast rule is to be consistent within the same document - or be prepared to defend your choice against rampant editors.

)
Which is why I asked if anyone knows of an official Irish language style guide at the top of this post.
