13 Questions, answers, negatives
13.5 Question-word questions (1):'Who(m)...?','What...?'
13.5A Form of question-word questions (except subject questions [> 13 8])
[> LEG 13.30-32]Write:Study:
0The word order of question-word questions is: question-word + auxiliary + subject:
statement: He is working. He arrives at 8.
Yes/No question: Is he working? Does he arrive at 8? [> 13.1 A]
question-word: Why is he working? When does he arrive?
(Not *Why he is working?") (Not 'When he arrives?")Make two questions from each statement:
a a Yes/No question; b a question-word question.1 She is arriving today.
(When)
2 He has written a letter.
(Why)
3 She can help us.
(How)
4 They live in Jamaica.
(Where)
5 He arrives at 10.
(What time)
6 You can't tell us.
(What)b W.H&tt. и Mw. сити/и^. ?...
a b a b a b a b a b13.5B 'Who(m)...?' as a question-word [> LEG 13.33]
Study:
1*51 Who(m)...? asks for the object of a sentence, usually a person's name or a pronoun:
statement: Frank met Alice, question: Who(m) did Frank meet? - Alice.2 Who(m)...? refers only to people and can be used to ask about masculine, feminine, singular
or plural: Who(m) did you see? - Tim/Ann/The Robinsons.3 We still use Whom ...?in formal English, spoken or written, but we often prefer Who ...?in
everyday style:
Whom did you meet at the party? (formal) Who did you meet at the party? (informal)4 We often use Who(m)...? in questions with verbs followed by to or for.
Who(m) did you give it to? Who(m) did you buy it for?Write: Write questions using the past tense with Who(m)...? to produce the answers given.1 you invite to your house? - The Frys.
2 Jane see this morning? - Her mother
3 you speak to? - The manager
4 they employ? - Miss Johnson
5 she buy this present for? - Her son
6 John phone? - His brother
7 you complain to? - The headmaster
8 she write to? - Her sister