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Asking General and Special Questions

The climate is temperate.

Is the climate temperate?

What is the climate like?

The US produces food

products.

Does the US produce

food products?

What does the US

produce?

There are many ethnic

groups.

Are there many ethnic

groups?

What ethnic groups are

there in the US?

1. Make questions from these statements.

1 She likes travelling

Does she like travelling?

2 They're working.

Are they working?

3 He was playing tennis.

4 She went to school today.

5 They live here.

6 She's eating at the moment.

7 They drove to the station.

8 She's reading.

9 He had breakfast early.

10 They came today.

11 She drives to work.

12 He left this morning.

13 He was writing a letter.

14 They watched television.

15 She's at home.

16 They went home.

17 She likes horror films.

18 He's walking home.

19 They were eating ice cream.

20 They gave him the money.

2. In your notebook, make ten questions from the box below, and give the answers.

Who

Why

When

Where

What

What time

How

How much

are you going?

did they leave?

is she talking to?

did they come here?

are you looking at?

did it cost?

Example: Why did they leave?

Because they wanted to catch the train.

Who asked you? Who did you ask? – Question words used as subject or object

Who drove the car?

Who did you see?

What happened?

What did you do?

who and what are sometimes the subject.

who and what as subject + verb:

Alison asked you. Who asked you? Alison.

NOT Who did ask you!

who and what are sometimes the object.

who and what as object + question form of verb:

You asked Steve. Who did you ask? Steve.

Who stayed with you?

but Who did Jane stay with? (Preposition at the end.)

3. Write the questions.

1 Who came to see you? Simon came to see me.

2 Who did Julie meet last night? Julie met Barbara.

3 What… you… reading? I like reading novels.

4 Who ……? Joe made the cake.

5 Who ……? Helen found the car keys.

6 What ……? A cigarette started the fire.

7 What … you … ? I want some help.

8 Who … you? Caroline told me.

9 Who … with Paul? Sue stayed with Paul.

10 What …you …? I said nothing.

11 Who ……? David came with Mary.

12 What … you …? I study medicine.

13 Who ……? Linda lives with her parents.

14 Who ……? Greg opened the door.

15 What ……? Something terrible happened.

Modals

'Modals' are the small verbs like can, must, and might, which give certain

meanings to main verbs.

FORM

There are twelve modal verbs:

can

could

may

might

shall

should

will

would

must

ought to

need (to)

dare

• Positive is formed by putting the modal between the subject and the

main verb:

We should stay.

You ought to go.

He might come.

• Negative is formed by adding not (or n't) after the modal:

We shouldn't stay.

You ought not to come.

He might not come.

• Questions are formed by changing the position of the modal and the subject:

Should we stay? Shouldn't we stay?

Ought you to go? Oughtn't yon to go?

Might he come? Mightn't he come?

Notes

need can be needn't [modal form) or don't need to (verb form).

• Negative questions generally use n't. If not is used, there is a different word order:

Shouldn't we stay? Should we not stay?

Using modals in questions and negatives