Questions
Questions
Wh-questions begin with what, when, where, who, whom, which, whose, why and
how. We use them to ask for information. The answer cannot be yes or no:
A:When do you finish college?
B:Next year.
A:Who is your favourite actor?
B:George Clooney for sure!
Forming wh-questions
With an auxiliary verb
We usually form wh-questions with wh- + an auxiliary verb (be, do or have) + subject +
main verb or with wh- + a modal verb + subject + main verb:
Be: When are you leaving?
Whos been paying the bills?
Do: Where do they live?
Why didnt you call me?
Have: What has she done now? What have they decided?
Modal: Who would she stay with? Where should I park?
Responding to wh-questions
Wh-questions ask for information and we do not expect a yes-no answer to a whquestion. We expect an answer which gives information:
A:Wheres the coffee machine? (We expect an answer about the location of the coffee
machine.)
B:Its in the room next to the reception.
A:How old is your dog? (We expect an answer about the age of the dog.)
B:Shes about five. Im not very sure.
Negative wh-questions
When we ask negative wh-questions, we use the auxiliary verb do when there is no
other auxiliary or modal verb, even when the wh-word is the subject of the clause:
Affirmative with no auxiliary Negative with auxiliary do
Who wants an ice cream?
Who doesnt want an ice cream?
Which door opened?
Which door didnt open?
In yes-no questions, the word order changes from subject + (auxiliary verb) +
main verb to auxiliary verb + subject + main verb:
Do you agree?
Not: Are you agree?
What does art mean?
Not: What art means? or What means art?
We can only use auxiliary and modal verbs, not main verbs, before the subject:
We use what, not which, to ask about specific information from a general range
of possible answers: