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Before and after no, before and after no.
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The six sentence patterns of antisense interrogative sentences are as follows:
1. After the imperative sentence, will you or won is generally added't you constitutes an antithetic interrogative sentence, which uses will you to express "request" and uses the source hu won't you mostly means to remind the other party to pay attention.
2. When an antisense interrogative sentence is added after an exclamation sentence, the antisense interrogative sentence needs to be in the negative form of the general present tense of be.
3. When the predicate verbs in the statement part are need, dare, used to, and these words are used as real verbs, the antisense question stupid sentence needs to use the appropriate form of do.
4. The subject and predicate of the statement part are i am...., the antonym interrogative sentence is used as aren'T i or ain't i instead of am not i (can be used am i not).
5. When the subject of the statement part is the indefinite pronoun one, the subject of the antonym interrogative sentence can be used as one or you (he is used in American English).
6. When the statement part contains the following words with negative meanings: few, little, seldom, hardly, never, not, no, no one, nobody, nothing, none, neither, etc., the antinotic interrogative sentence needs to use an affirmative structure.
Antisense interrogative sentence, it is actually a variant of the general interrogative sentence with split sentence, which is composed of a declarative sentence + a half-truncated interrogative sentence, and the scene used is: I want to express a thing, but I am not absolutely sure, so it becomes a question to ask the other party.
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Nowadays, there is very little use of antonym interrogative sentences in English, and such sentences are almost impossible to find in English textbooks.
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Before and after no, before and after no.
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The method of the anti-meaning question sentence is described as follows:
Use yes or no in antisense interrogative sentences. If the answer is yes, yes is used, and no is used for negation, yes is often said as yes or yup in colloquial language, and no can also be said as nope in colloquial language.
A tagquestion is a question that is attached to a declarative sentence to question the facts or opinions stated in the declarative sentence. This type of interrogative sentence consists of an auxiliary verb or modal verb plus a subject (often the same as the subject of a declarative sentence), preceded by a comma and followed by a question mark. The dry oak structure of the additional question sentence is actually a short general question sentence, so the answer must generally be yes or no.
Additional interrogative sentences are often anti-conting, so they are also called anti-interrogative sentences. If the declarative sentence is affirmatively constructed, the additional interrogative sentence followed by the negative structure is used; Conversely, if a declarative sentence has a negative structure, the additional interrogative sentence followed by an affirmative structure will be used. The subject of the additional interrogative sentence must be pronouns.
For example: your sister hasn't returned from San Francisco yet, has she?Your sister hasn't come back from San Francisco yet, has she?
yes, she has.No, she's back.
no, she hasn’t.Yes, she hasn't come back yet.
we were late, weren’t we?We're late, aren't we?
yes, we were.Yes, we're late.
no, we weren’t.No, we weren't late.
mickey can’t speak russian, can he?Mikey doesn't speak Russian, does he?
yes, he can.No, he would say.
no, he can’t.Yes, he won't say.
If there is no be or auxiliary verb or modal verb in the declarative sentence, the auxiliary verb do (does) or did is used in the additional interrogative sentence. Such as:
john likes tea, doesn’t he?John likes to drink tea, travel, right?
no, he doesn’t.No, he doesn't like it.
EnglishAntisense interrogative sentenceExample sentences and yes >>>More
What is an antisense interrogative sentence?
Basic structure of the retortive interrogative sentence:
Declarative sentence (Ken No), auxiliary verb (no Ken) + subject? >>>More
Usage of additional interrogative sentences:
1.The subject of the statement is i, and the question part is not used't i, or aren't i。 >>>More
1. A general interrogative sentence containing a verb of be or a modal verb, the structure of which is: >>>More