I already clarified this in the discussion that prompted this question, but I suppose it's worth promoting that to an answer here…
Simply put, determining whether a question is a duplicate is a completely separate matter from deciding how it should be tagged, and thus the "fatal flaw" that I cited for tagging doesn't exist for assessing duplication.
Quite unlike tagging, the people who are voting to close a question as a duplicate are expected to be experts in the relevant technologies, and thus are perfectly capable of making the determination that the answer is identical for both C and C++. In these cases, a C question can be marked as a duplicate of a C++ question, and vice versa. If the answers would be different, then the questions are not duplicates, and either should not be closed as such or should be re-opened by an expert.
This is facilitated by the fact that we give gold tag badge holders the power to close and re-open questions as duplicates with a single vote. If you tag the question with the language you are interested in (say, C++), then it gets marked as a duplicate of a C question, it's entirely possible (and, anecdotally, not uncommon) that a C++ expert will come along, determine that there is sufficient difference between C and C++ in the question's scope, and thus re-open the question.
The acid test for duplicates is, do these two questions have the same answer? If so, then they're duplicates. A qualified expert is able to judge this, which is why we give them the power to immediately mark duplicates, and why we don't impose any arbitrary limits based on the questions' tags.
Again, this is totally different from the "predicting the future" tagging issue that I was talking about over there. You tag the question when you ask it, and the asker almost by definition does not know whether the answer will be the same in C, C++, Delphi, or whatever other languages. The asker also doesn't care. It's the responsibility of the answerer to know/verify this, and marking a question as a duplicate is just a special sub-case of answering it (i.e., answering it by saying, your answer can be found here on this other question).
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