The document provides examples of questions that could be generated from statements by changing a single word - the question word - to ask why, what, how, when, where, who or how about the statement. It includes 12 sample statements and suggests changing the question word to ask for different details like why something was done, what was offered or said, how someone felt, when or where something occurred, who was involved, and how something was done.
The document provides examples of questions that could be generated from statements by changing a single word - the question word - to ask why, what, how, when, where, who or how about the statement. It includes 12 sample statements and suggests changing the question word to ask for different details like why something was done, what was offered or said, how someone felt, when or where something occurred, who was involved, and how something was done.
The document provides examples of questions that could be generated from statements by changing a single word - the question word - to ask why, what, how, when, where, who or how about the statement. It includes 12 sample statements and suggests changing the question word to ask for different details like why something was done, what was offered or said, how someone felt, when or where something occurred, who was involved, and how something was done.
2. He offered me a job. (what) 3. He is angry. (how) 4. She says she loves him. (what) 5. He will come here tomorrow morning. (when) 6. She traveled to the Bahamas. (where) 7. Heloisa and Wesley are my best friends for a long time. (who) 8. We will say that because she needs us. (why) 9. He wrote a poem at the bathroom door. (where) 10. He wrote a poem with a knife at the bathroom door. (how) 11. Cadu cooked it. (who) 12. We saw this at the hotel on vacation. (when)