Table of Contents
How do you make a question example?
Wh-questions begin with what, when, where, who, whom, which, whose, why and how. We use them to ask for information….With an auxiliary verb.
Be: When are you leaving? | Who’s been paying the bills? |
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Have: What has she done now? | What have they decided? |
Modal: Who would she stay with? | Where should I park? |
How do you use was and were correctly?
Was is used in the first person singular (I) and the third person singular (he, she, it). Were is used in the second person singular and plural (you, your, yours) and first and third person plural (we, they). I was driving to the park. You were drinking some water.
What are examples of had questions?
And to make a ‘yes / no’ question put ‘had’ before the subject:
- Had I come?
- Had you eaten?
- Had she gone?
- Had it rained?
- Had he studied?
- Had we met?
- Had they left?
Did past simple questions?
In the simple past tense, negative and question forms are made using the auxiliary verb “do” (in its past form, “did”) followed by the simple form of the main verb….2. Forming a yes/no question.
Simple past statement | Yes/no question |
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He brought his friend. | Did he bring his friend? |
They had a party. | Did they have a party? |
Can a question sentence example?
Examples: I will go to the store now. / I’ll go to the store now. He will do it soon. /He’ll do it soon. We’ll see him later.
Can we use past tense with was?
When to use were Whereas was is the singular past tense of to be, were is used for both the third person plural past tense (they and we) and the second person past tense (you). In the past indicative, were acts similar to was. “They were at the store,” you could say, for example.