ESL Forum:
Techniques and methods
in Language Teaching
Games, activities
and teaching ideas
Grammar and
Linguistics
Teaching material
Concerning
worksheets
Concerning
powerpoints
Concerning online
exercises
Make suggestions,
report errors
Ask for help
Message board
|
ESL forum >
Ask for help > tag questions
tag questions
|
domnitza
|
Another one: COME , not came! (shame on me!)
|
9 Dec 2008
|
|
domnitza
|
and Vickiii, too.
I don�t know any Romanian words that could get along with the word you told us about. I have a toddler, too, and the way he speaks is an every-day-miracle, I usually don�t understand what he says. He is crazy about the vacuum cleaner, which in Romanian is <aspirator>, but he names it ABU. So <abu> is the word he says all the time. I heard older toddlers speaking and I was totally confused, as if they had spoken a secret language. |
9 Dec 2008
|
|
CILB
|
I have found this. I hope it helps.
QUESTION-TAG 1 Whenever we use an auxiliary or anomalous verb in an affirmative sentence, the Q.T.1 must be formed by repeating the verb in its negative interrogative form, as: He is a doctor, ISN�T HE? They were sleeping, WEREN�T THEY? We must study, MUSTN�T WE?
But: I am a student, AREN�T I? She may come later, MAY SHE NOT? There are two boys outside, AREN�T THERE?
site : www.geocities.com |
9 Dec 2008
|
|
wolfy
|
I think if you had to absolutley must add a tag, then it would probably go the same way as "I am a teacher, Am I not? �Because may not and Am not are never contracted. �Having said that there is an alternative for Am I not?: Aren�t I? �So maybe there�s an alternative to "May he not"
So He may go, may he not? sounds strange but gramatically I think is OK, although as I and Vicki mentioned we wouldn�t actually use it. |
9 Dec 2008
|
|
alien boy
|
Another thing re may & might - I believe that etymologically speaking �might� is the past tense of �may�. Might is also a conditional irregular form of may. This means the tag may be perfectly acceptable as �He may come, mightn�t he?� (which isn�t that uncommon in Australian English). �Mayn�t� is actually perfectly acceptable (it is in Merriam Webster & the Oxford Dictionaries, for example), but archaic, so you�re unlikely to hear it on the street or read it in a magazine.
Cheers B-)
|
9 Dec 2008
|
|
Zora
|
You know, I was reading this topic and at first I thought that "He may come, mightn�t he?" sounded okay as an answer .. but then, I just said to myself that maybe I am wrong and just thought I heard it somewhere...since it seemed strange to put a "mightn�t" with a "may"...
Thank you alien boy for clearing that up for me...
Linda
|
9 Dec 2008
|
|
< Previous
1
2
|