Читать правило на русском
Объяснение Вопросы 1
Объяснение Вопросы 2 Test
Объяснение Вопросы 3 Test
In the English language there are several types of questions.
1. General questions
Also known as "Yes/No questions" because a short answer (yes or no) is expected. This kind of question is formed by putting an auxiliary verb before the subject.General questions most often start with: Do? Did? Have? Has? Is? Are? Was? Were? Can? Could? etc.
Examples:
- Are you from Brazil? Answer: Yes, I am / No, I am not
- Did you meet Andy? Answer: Yes, I did / No, I didn't
- Was she at home yesterday? Answer: Yes, she was / No, she wasn't
2. Special Questions
Special questions are those questions that ask for details. Special questions are also called Wh-questions as most of them start with "wh".For example: What? Which? When? Where? Why? Whose?
Other special questions include: How? How many? How much?
Special questions require inversion, like general questions.
- Where are you from? Answer: I am from India
- What are you wearing on your head? Answer: I'm wearing a hat or It's a hat!
- How much money do you have? Answer: I have only $10.
- How old are you? Answer: I'm 16.
Subject questions have the word order of an affirmative sentence.
- Who will buy milk?
- Who's in charge here?
- What makes you think so?
- Who wants some coffee?
3. Alternative questions
Alternative questions are also called or-questions because this type of questions gives you a choice. This kind of question is formed like general questions by putting an auxiliary verb before the subject.
General questions most often start with: Do? Did? Have? Has? Is? Are? Was? Were? Can? Could? etc.
Examples:
- Are you from Brazil or Russia?
- Did you watch a movie or played computer games yesterday?
- Was she at home or at work yesterday?
Question tags are short questions that appear at the end of some sentences. We use them to show emphasis, politeness, irony or lack of confidence. Question tags are usually used in informal and spoken English.
QT = question tags
Examples:
- Stop talking, will you?
- They have just arrived, haven't they?
- He wasn't serious, was he?
- Our team will win this match, won't it?
- Justin met her 3 years ago, didn't he?
- Let's meet at the Stadium, shall we?
- She's pretty, isn't she?
- You like her, don't you?
- You don't like her, do you?
- He was there, wasn't he ?
How Do We Form Them?
Main Clause + the comma + Positive/ Negative Auxiliary Verb + PersonalPronounAs you can see, forming most of question tags is rather easy.
1. If the main clause is positive, like this one:
- He plays football.
- He plays football, doesn't he?
- He doesn't play football.
- He doesn't play football, does he?
They don't talk much, do they? (main clause is negative, QT is positive.)
They talk a lot, don't they? (main clause is positive, QT is negative.)
Remember that you should only use personal pronouns in QTs:
- These cars are very comfortable, aren't these cars?
- These cars are very comfortable, aren't they?
- Mary is strikingly beautiful, isn't she?
- You told her, no?
- It is a nice car, innit?
- You have the tickets, right?
- He's a good buddy, eh?
- Clever, ain't it?
- Got some trouble, huh?
Watch the video about Ben and Holly 'Hard Times' and do the exercises below:
1. What type of questions are they - General (Yes-No questions), Special (Wh-questions), Tag questions (tail-questions), Alternative questions (or-questions)
- Where would we be without elves?
- Is there something else?
- How much do we owe you?
- We’ll just get some money, won’t we Nanny?
- Can I have a go?
- Mr elf, would it be ok to pay you in buttons?
- What’s money for?
- How do we get a gold coin?
- Do you want to be a sailor, a toy factory worker or a farm worker?
2. Watch the video and answer the questions:
- What was delivered to the castle today?
- What did Mr Elf want?
- How much money does the king owe Mr Elf?
- What grows in the magic money chest?
- What sounds like popcorn?
- Why can’t Ben make money?
- What did Holly put in the chest instead of a coin?
- Is Mr Elf ok with being paid in buttons?
- Why did Nanny Plum go red in the face when she told the king that the magic chest was broken?
- How did Mr King feel when he told Mr Elf that he was short of money?
- What is King’s bad news and good news?
- How are they going to get a gold coin to put into the magic chest?
- How is the king going to get a gold coin?
- Where do you have to go to get a job?
- What was the king’s last job?
- What skills does the king have?
- What kind of jobs can the job center offer?
- Who do the sailors need to launch their ship?
- Does the king think mopping the deck is interesting or dull?
- Why can’t he use magic to speed things up?
- Why did the king and sailors abandon ship?
- Who do the factory workers need to inspect the toys?
- Does the king like being the ‘gloop elf’?
- What did the king do wrong in the toy factory?
- Who do the farm workers need to start their harvest dance?
- What does a pumpkin need to grow nice and big?
- Why did the pumpkin explode?
- How many gold coins did the king earn?
- Why did the Old Wise Elf give the king the gold coin?
- Why did the king decide to work evenings?
- How is the king useful to his people?
- What job is the king second best at?
- What job is the king best at?
3. Ask questions about these sentences:
Special (Wh-questions) Somewhere hidden amongst thorny brambles is a little kingdom of elves and fairies.
General (Yes-No questions) Everyone who lives here is very very small.
Special (Wh-questions) Today’s adventure starts at a little castle.
General (Yes-No questions) Mr Elf delivered food to the castle.
Tag questions (tail-questions) I am just a humble factory worker today.
Special (Wh-questions) The king mopped the deck.
Alternative questions (or-questions) The king pushed a button to make ‘gloop’, he didn’t paint the ducks.
Alternative questions (or-questions) The king watered the pumpkin, not the cabbage.
Tag questions (tail-questions) The king is second best at being king.
SELF-CHECK EXERCISES
QUESTIONS - yes-no, wh, tags and some fun
Learn the words HERE