UNIT 51. Question tags (do
you? isn't it? etc.)
A. Study these examples:
You haven't seen Mary today,
have you?
No, I'm afraid not.
It was a good film, wasn't it?
Yes. I really enjoyed it.
Have you? and wasn't it? are
question tags (= mini-questions that we often put on the end of a sentence in
spoken English). In question
tags, we use an auxiliary verb (have/was/will etc.).
We use do/does/did for the
present and past simple (see also Unit 50):
* 'Karen plays the piano,
doesn't she?' 'Well, yes, but not very well.'
* 'You didn't lock the door,
did you?' 'No, I forgot.'
B. Normally we use a negative
question tag after a positive sentence:
positive sentence + negative
tag
Mary will be here soon, won't
she?
There was a lot of traffic,
wasn't there?
Jim should pass the exam,
shouldn't he?
... and a positive question
tag after a negative sentence:
negative sentence + positive
tag
Mary won't be late, will she?
They don't like us, do they?
You haven't got a car, have
you?
Notice the meaning of yes and
no in answer to a negative sentence:
* You're not going out today,
are you? Yes. (Yes, I am going out)
* You're not going out today,
are you? No. (No, I am not going out)
C. The meaning of a question
tag depends on how you say it. If your voice goes down, you aren't really
asking a question; you are
only inviting the listener to agree with you:
* 'It's a nice day, isn't it?'
'Yes, lovely.'
* 'Tim doesn't look well
today, dose he? 'No, he looks very tired.'
* She's very pretty. She's got
beautiful eyes, hasn't she?
But if the voice goes up, it
is a real question:
* 'You haven't seen Mary
today, have you?' 'No, I'm afraid not.'
(= Have you seen Mary today by
any chance?)
We often use a negative
sentence + positive tag to ask for things or information, or to ask somebody to
do
something. The voice goes up
at the end of the tag in sentences like these:
* 'You haven't got a pen, have
you?' 'Yes, here you are.'
* 'You couldn't do me a
favour, could you?' 'It depends what it is.'
* 'You don't know where Karen
is, do you?'Sorry, I've no idea.'
D. After Let's... the question
tag is ... shall we?:
Let's go for a walk, shall we?
After the imperative
(Do.../Don't do... etc.), the tag is usually ... will you?:
Open the door, will you?
Don't be late, will you?
Note that we say ... aren't I?
(= am I not?):
I'm late, aren't I?
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