词汇 | grammar_british-grammar_questions-yes-no-questions-are-you-feeling-cold | ||||||||||||||
释义 | Questions: yes-no questions (Are you feeling cold?)Questions that need either a yes or a no answer are called yes-no questions:
Forming yes-no questionsWith an auxiliary verbWe form yes-no questions with an auxiliary verb (be, do or have) + subject + main verb or with a modal verb + subject + main verb:
Where there is no auxiliary verb be, have or modal verb already present in the statement, we use the auxiliary do, does, did:
We don’t use an auxiliary verb when we use be as a main verb:
Warning: When there is more than one auxiliary verb or a modal verb plus auxiliary verb(s), we only put the first auxiliary or the modal verb before the subject and the others after the subject: Auxiliary + subject + auxiliary + verb
Auxiliary + subject + auxiliary + verb
Modal + subject + auxiliary + auxiliary + verb
We only put auxiliary and modal verbs, not main verbs, before the subject:
See also: Be Have Without an auxiliary verbWhen we ask yes-no questions using the main verb be, we don’t use an auxiliary verb. The word order is: be + subject:
When we ask yes-no questions with the main verb have, we can also use the word order verb + subject, but it sounds rather formal. We use have got and do as more neutral or informal alternatives:
Warning: When we ask questions with the main verb have in the past to refer to possession, we use did … have rather than had … got:
Responding to yes-no questionsOther ways of saying yes and no include yeah, yep, mm, okay, and nah, nope. These are informal:
We can also give more than just a yes or no answer. We sometimes add more information:
Sometimes we don’t use yes or no as a reply but the answer that we give means yes or no:
We sometimes respond using the auxiliary verb from the question instead of yes and no:
Negative yes-no questionsWe usually use negative yes-no questions to check or confirm something we believe or expect to be the case, or when we consider that something is the best thing to do:
We form negative yes-no questions with not. We usually use the contraction n’t. If we use not in its full form, the question sounds very formal:
Warning: When using the full form not, the order auxiliary + subject (s) + not is more common than auxiliary + not + subject:
We can use negative yes-no questions to make invitations, offers and complaints stronger:
See also: Requests Invitations Offers Imperatives as offers and invitations Invitations Politeness Hedges (just) Intonation and yes-no questionsThe intonation of yes-no questions is normally either rising [ri↗sing arrow] or fall-rising [dow↘n u↗p arrow] intonation depending on the meaning. If we do not know the answer, we use rising intonation. If we more or less know the answer and are looking for confirmation, we use fall-rising intonation:
We often use fall-rising intonation with yes-no questions when asking a number of questions together:
See also: Intonation |
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