- Subject question vs. object question - English Language Learners Stack . . .
I this task, as far as I understand, students are asked to come up with two questions for each sentence and one question must be an object question and the other one must be a subject one However, when I look at the sentence 3 there: it looks to me like both suggested questions are object questions: "What did Eva do yesterday?"
- Which of Question on, question about, question regarding . . .
"a question on" means: "a question on the topic of" and therefore can only be used when one can insert the phrase "the topic of" after the "on", while "a question about" can used before anything Example: "I have a question on problem 5 in the homework assignment " equals "I have a question on the topic of problem 5 in the homework assignment
- ESL Conversation Questions - The Art of Conversation (I-TESL-J)
A list of questions you can use to generate conversations in the ESL EFL classroom
- prepositions - on question 1 or in question 1 - English Language . . .
The word "on" fits better meaning "on the subject of question 1" The word "in" fits better meaning "occurring in question 1", or in its answer, if that is what is meant The comments would be understood with either "on" or "in", though Since you've invited rewording, these might work: For question 1, you repeated the example as a sentence
- meaning - What is the difference between S and S? - English Language . . .
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- questions - is vs. are and when to use them - English Language . . .
But for a sentence that is a question which is in the form of a closed interrogative clause, like that of the OP's examples, the verb happens to come first, and we'll naturally use the number of the verb when we then parse the following NP, for we'll be naturally assuming that the closest NP is the subject If that NP doesn't match in number
- When to use is vs. does when asking a question?
When the verb in a statement is neither a primary auxiliary verb (be, have, do) nor a modal auxiliary verb (will, would, can, could, may, might, shall, should, must, ought to, used to), do is used to form a question from it
- ESL Conversation Questions - Restaurants Eating Out (I-TESL-J)
Restaurants Eating Out A Part of Conversation Questions for the ESL Classroom Related: Fruits and Vegetables, Vegetarian, Diets, Food Eating, Tipping
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