Page 75 - Advanced English Grammar in Use
P. 75

F o r m i n g  q u e s t i o n s ;  r e p o r t i n g  q u e s t i o n s



                Forming questions
                Some  questions  begin  with  a  wh-word.  We  can  call  these  wh-questions:
                   •  What are you doing tomorrow?  •  Where have you been?
                Some  questions  can  be  answered with  'yes'  or 'no'.  We  can  call  these  yes/no  questions.
                   •  Have you had to come far?     •  Did she leave any message?

               QU there  is  an  auxiliary  verb  (be,  do,  have,  can,  will,  etc.)  we  put  it  in  front  of the  subject:
               •   •  Have you ever visited  California?  •  Why  are you telling me this now?
                If there  is more than  one  auxiliary verb,  we put  only the  first  auxiliary  in  front  of the  subject:
                   •  Will  they  be  arrested  if they  refuse to  leave?  (not Will  be they  arrested...?)
                We can make  questions  in  a  similar  way when be  is  a  main verb:
                   •  Was she happy when  she  lived in France?  •  When is he likely to arrive?
                When  we  ask  yes/no  questions  with  have  as  the  main  verb,  we  usually  use  Have...got...?  or
                Do...have...?  Questions  such as  'Have you  a pen?'  are rather formal  (see  also Unit 27):
                   •  Do you  have...  / Have you  got  a  reservation?  (rather  than  Have  you  a...?)

                If there  is  no  other  auxiliary verb, we make  a  question  by putting do  or  does  (present simple),  or
                did  (past  simple)  in  front  of the  subject.  A  bare  infinitive  comes  after the  subject:
                   •  Does  anyone know where  I  left my diary?  •  When  did you  last  see Mary?
                If we use what, which, who or whose as the subject, we don't use do:
                   •  What  happened  to  your  car?  (not What  did  happen...?)
                Compare:
                   •  Who  (= subject) did you speak to at the party?  and  •  Who (= object) spoke to you?
                Notice  that  we  can  sometimes  use  do  when  what,  which,  who  or  whose  is  subject  if we  want  to
                encourage the  speaker to  give  an  answer.  Do  is  stressed  in  spoken  English:
                   •  Come on,  be honest - who did tell you?

                Study how  we  ask  questions  about what people think  or  say  using  a  that-c\ause:
                   •  When do you think  (that)  he will arrive?  •  What do you suggest (that)  I should do next?
                We can ask questions like this with advise, propose, recommend, say, suggest, suppose, think.
                When the  w^-word  is  the  subject  of the  second clause  we don't  include  that:
                   •  Who  did you  say was coming to  see me this morning?  (not  ...say that was coming...?)

                Reporting questions
                When  we  report  a  wh-question  we  use  a  reporting  clause  (see  Unit  43)  followed  by  a  clause
                beginning  with  a  м/^-word.  When  we  report  a  yes/no  question  we  use  a  reporting  clause
                followed  by  a  clause  beginning  with  either  if or  whether:
                   •  She  asked me what the problem was.  •  Liz wanted to know  if/whether  I'd  seen Tony.
                We  usually put the  subject  before  the  verb  in the  wh-,  if-,  or  whether-clause:
               а  •  'Have you seen Paul recently?'  -•  She wanted to know if I had seen Paul recently.
               •However,  if  the  original  question  begins  what,  which,  or  who  followed  by  be  +  complement,  we
                can put the complement before  or after be in the report:
                   •  'Who was the winner?'  —>  I asked who  the  winner was.  (or ...who  was the winner.  )
                Notice that we don't use  a form of do in the wh-, if-,  or wh ether-clause:
                   •  She asked me where I (had) found it.  (not ...where did I find it./...where I did find it.)
                However,  if we  are reporting  a  negative  question,  we  can  use  a  negative  form  of do:
                   •  He asked  (me)  why I  didn't want anything to eat.


                 Negative questions =  Wh-questions =     Verb + wh-clauses =
                 Reporting =        If and whether =>
   70   71   72   73   74   75   76   77   78   79   80