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		Ask for help >  What do you think the answer is? What do you think is the answer?     
			
		  What do you think the answer is? What do you think is the answer? 
		
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 ttuffl
 
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							| What do you think the answer is? What do you think is the answer? 
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							| I �m confused. Would anyone help me? Are both of these questions are acceptable ? If not, which is correct? 
 1. What do you think the answer is?  2. What do you think is the answer? 
 Thank you  |  29 Jul 2014      
					
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 lewisronaldc
 
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							| Both are grammatically correct.  Most native speakers I know prefer; What do you think the answer is?   For me, it is a smoother flowing question. |  29 Jul 2014     
					
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 redcamarocruiser
 
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							| I agree. It depends on the intonation, too. 
 What do you think THE ANSWER is? (normal, asking for the answer to a question). 
 What do YOU think the answer is? (emphasizes the other person, could be criticizing him, but not necessarily) 
 What do you THINK is the answer? (sounds emphatic, emphasizes the other �s person �s thinking) Imagine a parent saying this in an irritated or exasperated  tome of voice when asked if the teen can do something that the parent feels completely ourtof the question, like when a 14 year old asked her Dad if she could go unaccompanied to Woodstock, a big outdoor concert in the 60s, with her boyfriend. 
 |  30 Jul 2014     
					
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 Leo212
 
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							| I agree most with redcamarocruiser. |  30 Jul 2014     
					
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 Mariya-ye
 
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							| I think the 1st one is correct - the question is in the fist part with the aux. verb " do" - so further there is a direct order of words. |  30 Jul 2014     
					
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 crm923
 
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							| Both are grammatically correct and used by us native speakers, depending on the situation. |  30 Jul 2014     
					
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 ttuffl
 
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							| Thank you all for the kind answers !!! |  30 Jul 2014     
					
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 rilum
 
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							| THE FIRST IS THE CORRECT. YOU MAKE THE QUESTION ONLY ONCE, THE SECOND PART OF THE QUESTIONS BECOMES AN AFFIRMATIVE SENTENCE. |  30 Jul 2014     
					
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 Nandel
 
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							| The first is the correct question because it �s an indirect question. The second part is always in the affirmative form. |  30 Jul 2014     
					
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 Tere-arg
 
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							| Hi, Only the first one is grammatically correct. 
 Who is that man?  => Do you know who that man is?
 
 Where does she live?   => Does anybody know where she lives?
 
 You can read more under "indirect questions". IQ are used to make the  question more formal/polite.
 
 |  31 Jul 2014     
					
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