- Conversation Questions for the ESL EFL Classroom (I-TESL-J)
Conversation Questions for the ESL EFL Classroom A Project of The Internet TESL Journal If this is your first time here, then read the Teacher's Guide to Using These Pages If you can think of a good question for any list, please send it to us
- Asking a question: DO or ARE? - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
Are you liking Chinese food? is probably never idiomatic outside of "Indian English", but Do you go to Spain next week? can certainly be perfectly natural in some contexts (for example, with you emphasised, within a conversation where it's already been mentioned that some [other] people are indeed going to Spain next week)
- Formal word phrase for the informal question tag right?
Neither of these sentences are OK in either a formal or an informal setting, because the question tags are not appropriate to the preceding sentence Firstly, You use the words correct and right in a question tag to check whether information in the preceding sentence is factually correct
- How to say the answer to your question is: shortly
I thought of: "The answer to your question is X", or "About your question, the answer is X", but this sounds too cumbersome I am sure I heard a shorter phrase for presenting an answer to a question
- A question about as . . . . . as comparison - English Language Learners . . .
A question about as as comparison Ask Question Asked 8 months ago Modified 8 months ago Viewed 695 times
- word usage - A question arises or is raised? - English Language . . .
Which one is correct for a formal paper? A question which arises, is whether people should watch Tv or not? or A question which is raised, is whether people should watch Tv or not? Thank you
- Ending let me know xxx with a question mark or period?
I am asking a question but at the same time I am starting the sentence with let me know In such a scenario, should I end my statement with a question mark or a period?
- What is correct answer for the question Do you have. . . ?
Here are some good answers to the question, "Do you have money?" Yes Yes, I do Yes, I have money Yes, I have five dollars As Ustanak points out, Yes, I do have money is grammatically correct, but it is only natural when one wants to make an emphatic response To my (American) ear, the following sentence is only natural in the past tense, not in the present tense: Yes, I have Sentence 6
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