In English, there are few types of questions you may use to ask for responses, confirmations, information, etc. They include yes/no question, information question, negative question, alternative question, embed question.
[1] YES/NO QUESTIONS
Yes/no questions may be simply answered "yes" or "no". To form yes/no questions, we can use the form below:
a) To be: In sentences which “be” is main verb, we swap the position of subject and verb. For examples,
[1] YES/NO QUESTIONS
Yes/no questions may be simply answered "yes" or "no". To form yes/no questions, we can use the form below:
a) To be: In sentences which “be” is main verb, we swap the position of subject and verb. For examples,
- She is a student. → Is she a student?
- You are tired. → Are you tired?
b) Modal verb: In sentences with auxiliary verbs, we swap the position of the subject and auxiliary verb. Fore examples,
- They are sitting in the class. → Are they sitting in the class?
- They have been living here for long. → Have they been living here for long?
- They should bring umbrella. → Should they bring umbrella?
- He can rewrite the report. → Can he rewrite the report?
c) No auxiliary verb: In sentences which there are no auxiliary verb, we need to add the auxiliary verb "Do/Does" and place in front of the sentence. For examples,
- He studies English. → Does he study English?
- He got up late. → Did he get up late?
[2] INFORMATION QUESTIONS
Wh-questions (or information questions) begins with a question word (like what, which, where…) and are used to request information. For examples,
- What → What is your favorite color?
- Which → Which book do you prefer?
- When → When did you finished high school?
- Where → Where do you live?
- Why → Why did you change your career?
- How → How can I get to the post office?
- Who → Who is standing over there?
- Whom → Whom did you talk to?
[3] NEGATIVE QUESTIONS
Negatives questions are used when we expect the answer is “yes”.
- Isn’t she beautiful? → Yes, she is.
- Aren’t you afraid of failure? → Yes, sure.
Negatives questions are also used to confirm information whether something is correct or not, or to seek an agreement. For examples,
- Didn’t you understand what I’ve said? → No, I didn’t. or Yes, I did.
- Are they coming for the party? → No, they aren’t. or Yes, they are.
Note:
Negative questions can be formed in two ways:
a) Auxiliary verb + n’t + subject
- Aren’t you interested in the book?
- Weren’t you worried about her health?
b)Auxiliary verb + subject + not
- Are you not interested in the book?
- Were you not worried about her health?
[4] CHOICE QUESTIONS
Alternative or choice questions express two or more choices. For examples,
- Will you go to Malaysia or Indonesia?
- Should I choose apple, banana, or grape?
- Do you like coffee or tea?
[5] EMBEDDED QUESTIONS
Embedded questions are questions within another questions or statements. See indirect questions.
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