tag questions

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TAG QUESTION S Reported by: GADDI II – 11 BSE ENGLISH

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A report on Tag Questions.

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Page 1: Tag Questions

TAG QUESTIO

NS

Reported by:

GADDIII – 11 BSE ENGLISH

Page 2: Tag Questions

WHAT IS ATAG

QUESTION?

Page 3: Tag Questions

TAG QUESTIONA statement that is turned into a

question by adding an

interrogative fragment called a

“TAG”

Page 4: Tag Questions

For example…

You’re John, aren’t you?

Page 5: Tag Questions

TAG QUESTIONUsed to ask for confirmation or

opinion.“Am I right

?”

“Do you

agree?”

Page 6: Tag Questions

For example…

It is going to rain, isn’t it?

Page 7: Tag Questions

When a sentence is written, a comma

separates the main clause from the tag. If a tag question is sentence medial, commas set off

the tag, and the terminal punctuation is still a question mark.

Page 8: Tag Questions

It’s human, isn’t it, to hope that peace among all people in

the world is possible?

For example…

Page 9: Tag Questions

TAG QUESTIONAlthough they have

the grammatical form of a question,

they may differ from questions in that

they do not expect an answer.

Page 10: Tag Questions

When there is no auxiliary verb or be

verb in the main clause, then a do verb must be introduced as an operator to carry

the tense.

Page 11: Tag Questions

She assigned homework,didn’t she?

For example…

Page 12: Tag Questions

To form tag questions…

Page 13: Tag Questions

1.) If the main clause is

affirmative, the tag should be

negative.If the main clause is negative, the tag should be affirmative.

Page 14: Tag Questions

Your aunt is visiting from the province, isn’t

she?

For example…

Your aunt isn’t visiting from the province, is she?

Page 15: Tag Questions

2.) If the subject of the main clause is not a pronoun, then it must be pronominalized

in the tag.

Page 16: Tag Questions

Megan is quite a

volleyball player, isn’t

she?*(isn’t

Megan?)

For example…

Page 17: Tag Questions

Responding to Tag Questions

Page 18: Tag Questions

According to the extensive corpus of

oral and written data by Brown (1981)…

Out of 80 tag questions, 30% of the tags received no answer at all.

Page 19: Tag Questions

Others were responded to with a yes or a no.

Others received affirmative answers such as that’s right, or sometimes, additional information is offered.

According to the extensive corpus of

oral and written data by Brown (1981)…

Page 20: Tag Questions

For example…Q: You’re from Makati, aren’t you?A: Yes, I am.Q: You’re from Makati, aren’t you?A: That’s right.

Page 21: Tag Questions

For example…Q: You’re from Makati, aren’t you?A: Yes. I’ve lived there since I was a kid.

Page 22: Tag Questions

If the listener disagrees with the speaker, he would give an explanation for the disagreement.

According to the extensive corpus of

oral and written data by Brown (1981)…

Page 23: Tag Questions

For example…Q: It is going to rain tonight, isn’t it?A: No. The weather

station said it would only be cloudy.

Page 24: Tag Questions

FIVE MAJOR FUNCTIONS OF TAG QUESTIONS

Page 25: Tag Questions

1.) INDICATE INFERENCE

Ex.So, therefore, that proves

malice, doesn’t it?

Page 26: Tag Questions

2.) SEEKING AGREEMENTEx.

They keep coming back, don’t they?

Page 27: Tag Questions

3.) INVITING CONFIRMATIONEx.Science is your

favorite subject, isn’t it?

Page 28: Tag Questions

4.) EXPRESSING DOUBTEx.They can’t get

through the hole, can they?

Page 29: Tag Questions

5.) EXPRESSING OPINIONEx.But that makes a mockery of

belief, doesn’t it?

Page 30: Tag Questions

SIX MINOR FUNCTIONS OF TAG QUESTIONS

Page 31: Tag Questions

1. Keeping the conversation going

2. Expressing interest

3. Expressing humor or sarcasm

Page 32: Tag Questions

4. Beginning a conversation

5. Making a polite request

6. Expressing surprise

Page 33: Tag Questions