When we ask who, what and which about the object of the verb, we put the question word in front of a Yes/No question: He is seeing Joe tomorrow. They have been working hard for their exams. We form wh-questions with these words by putting the question word in front of a Yes/No question: They are working in a shop. GapFillDragAndDrop_MTYxODc= Questions with when, where, why ![]() Wh-questions are questions which start with a word like what, when, where, which, who, whose, why and how. GapFillDragAndDrop_MTYxODU= Present simple and past simple questions and negatives 2 Present simple and past simple questions and negatives 1 Usually we use do/does or did:īut we can also make questions by putting have/has or had in front of the subject:Īnd make negatives by putting not or n't after have/has or had: We make questions and negatives with have in two ways. Here are the question forms and negative forms for be in the present simple and past simple: Positives GapFillTyping_MTYxODQ= Present simple and past simple questions and negativesįor all verbs except be and have, we use do/does or did to make Yes/No questions in the present simple and past simple: They work hard.įor all verbs except be and have, we use do/does + not or did + not to make negatives in the present simple and past simple: They work hard. ReorderingHorizontal_MTYxNzA= Negatives 2 ![]() In spoken English, we often reduce not to n’t: We make negatives by putting not after the first part of the verb: Might they have been working hard? Yes/No questions 1 ReorderingHorizontal_MTYxNjY= Yes/No questions 2 GapFillTyping_MTYxNjk= Negatives We make Yes/No questions by putting the first part of the verb in front of the subject: ![]() Yes/No questions are questions which we answer with Yes or No.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |