Positive Statement Tag Questions
Positive Statement Tag Questions
Positive Statement Tag Questions
Notice that the tag repeats the auxiliary verb (or main verb when be) from the statement and
changes it to negative or positive.
the use of do in the two coffee questions. Remember that in Present Simple, do is
optional in positive statements (You like coffee/You do like coffee). But the do must
appear in the tag. The same applies to Past Simple did.
in last two questions, no auxiliary for main verb be in Present Simple and Past Simple.
The tag repeats the main verb.
Answer a tag question according to the truth of the situation. Your answer reflects the real facts,
not (necessarily) the question.
For example, everyone knows that snow is white. Look at these questions, and the correct
answers:
correct
tag question notes
answer
Snow is white,
Yes (it is). Answer is same in both
isn't it?
cases - because snow is
Snow isn't
Yes it is! white! But notice change of stress when
white, is it?
answerer does not agree with
Snow is black, questioner.
No it isn't! Answer is same in both
isn't it?
cases - because snow is not
Snow isn't black, No (it black!
is it? isn't).
In some languages, people answer a question like "Snow isn't black, is it?" with "Yes" (meaning
"Yes, I agree with you"). This is the wrong answer in English!
The moon goes round the earth, doesn't it? Yes, it does.
The earth is bigger than the moon, isn't it? Yes.
The earth is bigger than the sun, isn't it? No, it isn't!
Asian people don't like rice, do they? Yes, they do!
Elephants live in Europe, don't they? No, they don't!
Men don't have babies, do they? No.
The English alphabet doesn't have 40 letters, does it? No, it doesn't.
The adverbs never, rarely, seldom, hardly, barely and scarcely have a negative sense. Even
though they may be in a positive statement, the feeling of the statement is negative. We treat
statements with these words like negative statements, so the question tag is normally positive.
Look at these examples:
positive statement
positive tag
treated as negative statement
He never came again, did he?
She can rarely come these days, can she?
You hardly ever came late, did you?
I barely know you, do I?
You would scarcely expect her to know that, would you?
Intonation
We can change the meaning of a tag question with the musical pitch of our voice. With rising
intonation, it sounds like a real question. But if our intonation falls, it sounds more like a
statement that doesn't require a real answer:
intonation
You don't know where my wallet is, do you? / rising real question
It's a beautiful view, isn't it? \ falling not a real question
Imperatives
Sometimes we use question tags with imperatives (invitations, orders), but the sentence remains
an imperative and does not require a direct answer. We use won't for invitations. We use can,
can't, will, would for orders.
Notice that we often use tag questions to ask for information or help, starting with a negative
statement. This is quite a friendly/polite way of making a request. For example, instead of saying
"Where is the police station?" (not very polite), or "Do you know where the police station is?"
(slightly more polite), we could say: "You wouldn't know where the police station is, would
you?" Here are some more examples:
example notes
I am right, aren't I? aren't I (not amn't I)
You have to go, don't you? you (do) have to go...
I have been answering, haven't
use first auxiliary
I?
Nothing came in the post, did treat statements with nothing, nobody etc like negative
it? statements
Let's go, shall we? let's = let us
He'd better do it, hadn't he? he had better (no auxiliary)