A statement is a sentence that tells you something. A question is a sentence that asks you something. A statement does not require an answer. A question requires an answer.
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Why should everyone want to know random questions to ask? Because, random questions work so well because they throw your audience off balance in a conversation. That often makes people give more honest and genuine answers. And because of that, they're powerful questions to ask to know, to help keep conversations interesting. Use some of these random questions to shock and jostle your. These are the WH question words (WHy, HoW etc) that we use to make question word questions. This page lists their functions and gives example senyences. Vocabulary for ESL learners and teachers.
statement: | I like EnglishClub. | |
---|---|---|
question: | Do you like EnglishClub? | Yes |
Why do you like EnglishClub? | Because... |
A written question in English always ends with a question mark: ?
Question Structure
The basic structure of a question is:
auxiliary verb | + | subject | + | main verb |
Look at these example sentences. They all have the auxiliary verb before the subject:
auxiliary verb | subject | main verb | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Do | you | like | Mary? | |
Are | they | playing | football? | |
Will | Anthony | go | to Tokyo? | |
Did | he | leave | early? | |
Why | did | he | leave | early? |
When | will | he | return? |
Exception! For the main verb be in Present Simple and Past Simple, there is no auxiliary verb. Look at these example sentences. They all have the main verb before the subject:
main verb be | subject | ||
---|---|---|---|
Am | I | wrong? | |
Are | they | Thai? | |
Was | it | hot outside? | |
Why | were | you | late? |
Question Types
There are three basic question types:
- Yes/No: the answer is 'yes or no'
- Question-word: the answer is 'information'
- Choice: the answer is 'in the question'
We look at these in more detail below.
Yes/No questions
Sometimes the only answer that we need is yes or no. Look at these examples:
auxiliary verb | subject | not | main verb | answer: yes or no | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Do | you | want | dinner? | Yes, I do. | |
Can | you | drive? | No, I can't. | ||
Has | she | not | finished | her work? | Yes, she has. |
Did | they | go | home? | No, they didn't. |
Exception! Main verb be in Present Simple and Past Simple:
main verb be | subject | |
---|---|---|
Is | Anne | French? |
Was | Ram | at home? |
Question-word questions
Sometimes we want more than yes or no for an answer. When asking for information, we usually place a question-word at the beginning of the sentence. The question-word indicates the information that we want, for example: where (place), when (time), why (reason), who (person). Look at these examples:
question word | auxiliary verb | not | subject | main verb | answer: information | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Where | do | you | live? | In Paris. | ||
When | will | we | have | lunch? | At 1pm. | |
Why | has | n't | Tara | done | it? | Because she can't. |
Who(m) | did | she | meet? | She met Ram. | ||
Who* | has | run | out? | Ati has run out. | ||
Who** | ran | out? | Ati ran out. |
Question Of The Day Ideas
**In Present Simple and Past Simple tenses, there is no auxiliary verb with who.
Exception. Main verb be in Present Simple and Past Simple:
question word | main verb be | subject |
---|---|---|
Where | is | Bombay? |
How | was | she? |
Questions
Choice questions
Sometimes we give our listener a choice. We ask them to choose between two possible answers. So their answer is (usually) already in the question. Look at these examples:
auxiliary verb | subject | main verb | or | answer: in question | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Do | you | want | tea | or | coffee? | Coffee, please. |
Will | we | meet | John | or | James? | John. |
Exception. Main verb be in Present Simple and Past Simple:
main verb be | subject | OR | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Is | your car | white | or | black? |
Were | they | $15 | or | $50? |
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