
Please contact me if you have any questions or comments.Well this be my first post, and since its silly o'clock and I can't sleep I decided to compile a list of 101 random questions that I have or would ask people as I get to know them. Welcome! I'm Seonaid and I hope you like the website. Need more practice? Get more Perfect English Grammar with our courses. Try an exercise about tag questions with the present simple here He won't have been travelling all day, will he? She won't have left work before six, will she? He hasn't been running in this weather, has he? They didn't go out last Sunday, did they? She'll have been cooking all day, won't she? During World War II, Coca-Cola syrup was difficult to import into Nazi Germany. Called Erbauliche Monaths Unterredungen, the magazine was a literary and philosophical edition. More fun facts about Germany below The magazine was first invented in Germany in 1663. They'll have finished before nine, won't they? Fun Facts About Germany: Its Inventions and Sports. She's been studying a lot recently, hasn't she? We were waiting at the station, weren't we? He went to the party last night, didn't he? There is one weird exception: the question tag after I am is aren't I.įor example: I'm in charge of the food, aren't I? If there is no auxiliary verb (in the present simple and past simple) use do / does / did (just like when you make a normal question). If the main clause has an auxiliary verb in it, you use the same verb in the tag question. For example: It's cold (positive), isn't it (negative)? And: It isn't cold (negative), is it (positive)?

Usually if the main clause is positive, the question tag is negative, and if the main clause is negative, it's positive.

Negative question tags are usually contracted: It's warm today, isn't it (not 'is it not') Tag questions are made using an auxiliary verb (for example: be or have) and a subject pronoun (for example: I, you, she).

They are often used for checking information that we think we know is true. Tag questions (or question tags) turn a statement into a question.
