Tag Questions – English Grammar Lessons
Ellii Tag Questions
This section explains the concept of tag questions in English, their formation, and how to respond to them.
What are Tag Questions?
- Tag questions involve adding a short phrase at the end of a positive or negative sentence stem.
- Tag questions are used for emphasis or confirmation in spoken English.
- Example: "That kitten is cute, isn’t it?"
Forming Tag Questions
- To form tag questions, reverse the order of the subject and verb from the sentence stem.
- Subject pronouns remain the same in tags; nouns become pronouns.
- The tag verb is opposite to that in the sentence stem.
Types of Tag Questions
- Tags depend on the tense and verb used in the sentence stem.
- Positive stem verbs have negative tags; negative stem verbs have positive tags.
- Be verbs use Be in tags; other present verbs use "do" or "does."
Intonation in Tag Questions
- Intonation refers to voice rising or falling. Rising intonation implies less certainty than falling intonation.
- Rising intonation (80–90% sure): "That was a great movie, wasn’t it?"
- Falling intonation (95% sure): "That was a great movie, wasn’t it?"
Responding to Tag Questions
- Respond based on agreement with the sentence stem using appropriate verb forms ("yes" for agreement).
- Respond with “yes” for agreement with positive sentences and “no” for negatives.
Practice Exercises
This section provides practice exercises for forming and responding to tag questions.
Practice Examples
- Engage in exercises by providing correct tag questions with varying levels of certainty through intonation.
- Example: "They speak Spanish fluently, don’t they?"
- Practice saying twice with rising and falling intonations.
Conclusion