ENGLISH CLUB.
Dou speak English, don't you?
A tag question is a special construction in
English. It is a statement followed by a mini question. We use tag questions to
ask for confirmation. They mean something like: "Is that right?" or
"Do you agree?" They are quite common in English.
The basic structure of a tag question is:
positive statement
|
negative tag
|
Snow is white,
|
isn't it?
|
negative statement
|
positive tag
|
You don't like me,
|
do you?
|
Notice that the tag repeats the auxiliary verb (or
main verb when be) from the statement and changes it to negative or
positive.
Positive
Statement Tag Questions
Look at these examples with positive
statements. You will see that most of the time, the auxiliary verb from the
positive statement is repeated in the tag and changed to negative.
Notice:
- the use of do in the two
coffee questions. Remember that in Present Simple, do is
optional in positive statements (You like coffee/You do like coffee).
But the do must appear in the tag. The same applies to
Past Simple did.
- in last two questions, no auxiliary for main
verb be in Present Simple and Past Simple. The tag repeats the main
verb.
Negative Statement
Tag Questions
Look at these
examples with negative statements. Notice that the negative verb in
the original statement is changed to positive in the tag.
Notice:
- won't is
the contracted form of will not
- the tag repeats the auxiliary verb, not the
main verb. Except, of course, for the verb be in Present
Simple and Past Simple.
Answering Tag Questions
How do we
answer a tag question? Often, we just say Yes or No.
Sometimes we may repeat the tag and reverse it (They don't live here, do
they? Yes, they do). Be very careful about answering tag
questions. In some languages, an opposite system of answering is used, and
non-native English speakers sometimes answer in the wrong way. This can lead to a
lot of confusion!
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