Types of Ques
Types of Ques
Types of Ques
In linguistics, a yesno question, formally known as a polar question, is a question whose expected answer is either "yes" or "no". Formally, they present an exclusive disjunction, a pair of alternatives of which only one is acceptable. In English, such questions can be formed in both positive and negative forms (e.g. "Will you be here tomorrow?" and "Won't you be here tomorrow?"). Yesno questions are in contrast with non-polar wh-questions, with the five Ws, which do not necessarily present a range of alternative answers, or necessarily restrict that range to two alternatives. (Questions beginning with "which", for example, often presuppose a set of several alternatives, from which one is to be drawn.) Yes/No questions are basic questions in English. They are called Yes/No questions because the answer is "yes" or "no". Example: Do you like pizza? Yes I do. No I don't.
The rules 1. If the main verb of the sentence is "to be", simply invert the subject and the verb to be: Examples: They are American. Are they American? They are nice. Are they nice? 2. If the sentence includes a main verb and another or other helping (auxiliary) verb(s), invert the subject and the (first) helping (auxiliary) verb. Examples: They are visiting Paris. Are they visiting Paris? She has done the housework. Has she done the housework Nancy has been working all night long. Has Nancy been working all night long? He will be reading the book. Will he be reading the book? 3. If the sentence includes a verb which is not the verb "to be" and doesn't include a helping (auxiliary) verb, the transformation is more complex. 4. If the verb is in the present tense, add either do or does and put the main verb in its base form: do if the subject is the first person singular, second person singular, first person plural, second person plural and third person plural (I, you, we, they)
Examples: I like apples. Do you like apples? They go to a high school. Do the go to a high school? does if the subject is the third person singular (he, she, it). Examples: Nancy reads a lot. Does Nancy read a lot? He hates basketball. Does he hate basketball?
5. If the verb is in the past tense, add did and put the main verb in its base form: Examples: He discovered the truth. Did he discover the truth? She writes a nice essay. Did she write a nice essay? They did the homework. Did they do the homework?