安裝中文字典英文字典辭典工具!
安裝中文字典英文字典辭典工具!
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- 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
- 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
- Conversation Questions for the ESL EFL Classroom (I-TESL-J)
Interesting questions for discussions in Engish lessons A Project of The Internet TESL Journal If this is your first time here, then read the Teacher's Guide to Using These Pages
- ESL Conversation Questions - What if. . . ? (I-TESL-J)
A list of questions you can use to generate conversations in the ESL EFL classroom
- Do you know what IS IT? vs Do you know what IT IS?
What is it? is a question, but there's only one question here, not a question within a question As a declarative statement, you would say: You know what it is Making this into a question requires that you add the auxiliary verb do in front of the subject That's all you need to do to turn this statement into a question
- grammar - What is it? vs What is this? - English Language Learners . . .
Is the question "what is it?" correct when pointing something? Bonus question: is there a (ideally - strict) grammatical rule for this case? Note: I hoped another question would be a duplicate but the context is different (though it implies that there is no problem with " What is it?
- ESL Conversation Questions - Getting to Know Each Other (I-TESL-J)
A list of questions you can use to generate conversations in the ESL EFL classroom
- Would be or will be - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
However, if somebody posed you a hypothetical question and "200" was the answer, you would use "would" because the answer is not in the future It is not as easy as one would wish "Would" is correct, because this is a hypothetical statement, not something that will occur in the future If I had a wish, I would wish you would love me
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