Professional Documents
Culture Documents
QUESTIONS
QUESTION FORMS
Positive Do you have Are you a friend What would you Why were you
some time? of Jake’s? like to have for late for school?
(Yes-No) (Yes-No) breakfast? (Information)
(Information)
POSITIVE & NEGATIVE QUESTIONS
Negative – We Don’t you have Weren’t you at Why didn’t you How can’t the
use them to school today? the party last tell me about the dishwasher
express surprise What are you night? party? work? I’ve just
doing at home? Everybody was (Information) fixed it!
(Yes-No) there! (Yes-No) (Information)
INDIRECT QUESTIONS
Rather than asking a question directly, we make the question softer and
more polite.
Example: Think about a person who wants to ask the time in the street.
Which way sounds more polite?
A) What the time is it? B) Can you tell me what time it is?
INDIRECT QUESTIONS
• 2
• Question Order: Did you see Mr. Evans yesterday?
• Sentence Order: You saw Mr. Evans yesterday.
• Indirect Question: Can you tell me if you saw Mr. Evans yesterday?
WHEN THE QUESTION WORD IS THE
SUBJECT
Subject of a sentence is the thing or the person which performs an action. We can find the subject
by asking questions to the verb as ‘who’ and ‘what’.
I broke the vase. = Who? = I.
An accident happened yesterday. = What? = An accident.
When a question word is the subject of the question, we use the sentence order:
Who broke the vase? (We don’t know the subject)
Who did break the vase?
What happened yesterday? (We don’t know about the event)
What did happen yesterday?
INDIRECT QUESTIONS
• In this case, we use the sentence order and do not make any changes for these questions. Look at
the two examples below.
1
• Direct Question: Who cleans your house?
• Indirect Question: Can you tell me who cleans your house?
2
• Direct Question: What happened yesterday?
• Indirect Question: Can you tell me what happened yesterday?
THANK YOU FOR YOUR QUESTIONS?
ATTENTION!