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Question Tags

Question tags are used to confirm information, with a rising intonation when unsure and a falling intonation when certain. They can be formed by adding a negative question to positive statements or a positive question to negative statements, often using auxiliary or modal verbs. Special rules apply for using 'aren't' with 'I'm', and 'do', 'does', or 'did' in present and past simple sentences.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
21 views2 pages

Question Tags

Question tags are used to confirm information, with a rising intonation when unsure and a falling intonation when certain. They can be formed by adding a negative question to positive statements or a positive question to negative statements, often using auxiliary or modal verbs. Special rules apply for using 'aren't' with 'I'm', and 'do', 'does', or 'did' in present and past simple sentences.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Question Tags

Use:
Use question tags in two situations.
1) You are not sure if something is true, so you want to check. In this case, your voice


should rise when you say the question tag.

You’re not going now, are you?

2) You know something is true. You want to include/involve another person in the
conversation. In this case, your voice should fall when you say the tag. It does not


sound like a question.

He doesn’t live here now, does he?


Form:
Question tags are either:
1) positive statements with short, negative questions at the end.
These tags check something that you believe is true.
It’s Monday today, isn’t it?

2) negative statements with short, positive questions at the end.


These tags check something that you believe is false.
It’s not raining, is it?

Make question tags this way:


1) If there is an auxiliary verb or a modal verb, write it in the opposite form
(positive or negative) at the end of the sentence. Then write the subject pronoun of
the sentence.
Ian’s nice, isn’t he?
Laura hasn’t arrived yet, has he?
I can’t do anything to help, can I?
We won’t be late, will we?

Caution:
CAUTION: Use aren’t with I’m in questions tags.
I’m a bit careless, aren’t I? NOT I’m a bit careless, am not I?

2) In present and past simple sentences, use do, does or did in the question tag.
Brian and Cathy don’t eat meat, do they?
You dad lives abroad, doesn’t he?
Your friends enjoyed themselves, didn’t they?
3) Use a positive question tag after never.
Miles never goes out, does he?

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