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  2. Many questions start with 'wh' words, like: wh o. wh at. wh en. wh ere. wh ich. wh y. 'wh' is a grapheme where two letters (w and h) are brought together to make one sound. Questions can also ...

  3. Do you know how to make questions? Test what you know with interactive exercises and read the explanation to help you. Look at these examples to see how questions are made.

  4. Wh-questions begin with what, when, where, who, whom, which, whose, why and how. We use them to ask for information. The answer cannot be yes or no:

  5. How is the question word ‘how’ used? Use and purpose of the question word ‘ how ’. Note that it frequently combines with an additional word: “ How …?” asks for the manner: “ How are you?”. “ How + adjective …?” asks ‘ how ’ something is in terms of size or state, etc.: “ How old is your sister?”.

    • Forming questions in English is confusing. Lots of English learners wonder how to make a question with proper English grammar. Here’s how! Today I’m going to teach you a simple method that works for asking any questions in almost ALL the verb tenses.
    • Simple Present Tense Questions: QUESTION WORD. AUXILIARY VERB. SUBJECT. Where do you. work? What. does. Martha. think. about the project? How like. your new apartment?
    • Simple Past Tense Questions: QUESTION WORD. AUXILIARY VERB. SUBJECT. How. did. they. learn. English so fast? When. you. get home. from work yesterday? What. the manager.
    • Present Continuous Tense Questions: QUESTION WORD. AUXILIARY VERB. SUBJECT. What. are. you. doing. at the moment? Why is he ignoring. me? What time. are we meeting up. for dinner?
  6. We use the question words who (for people), what/which (for things), when (for time), where (for places), why (for reasons) and how (for more details). What do I need to know about question words?

  7. Present simple questions. Look at these questions: Do you play the piano? Where do you live? Does Jack play football? Where does he come from? Do Rita and Angela live in Manchester? Where do they work? We use do and does to make questions with the present simple. We use does for the third person singular (she/he/it) and do for the others.

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