A Question is Named for a Sentence that Contains an Interrogative Form: Prime Minister to Deputy
Today, during a speech by Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan in the National Assembly, deputies were asking questions to the Prime Minister. LLK deputy Ani Samsonyan, addressing Nikol Pashinyan, said: “You claim that you inherited the country in a pre-war situation, thus you have tried to start negotiations from a zero point, but your behavior as the head of the country, the behavior of your ruling faction as the parliamentary majority, and the behavior of your government members do not correspond to that of a governing force on the brink of war. For three years you have presented populist statements here, there hasn't been any fundamental reform. You have been fighting with the previous ones, playing a house-to-house game…”
Nikol Pashinyan, responding to the LLK deputy, said: “Ms. Samsonyan, this part of our session is called a question-and-answer. According to the grammatical rules of the Armenian language, a question is called the sentence that contains an interrogative form. Since there was no question in your speech, you gave a speech, that is your right… I do not consider it necessary to respond to your speech.”