Question Tags: BBC Learning English Ask About English
Question Tags: BBC Learning English Ask About English
Question tags
Well, question tags are commonly used in conversation, and they make the listener speak.
They encourage the listener to comment on what the speaker has just said. Notice how this
following conversation builds with question tags.
And so on.
We often use these question tags when we want to see if someone agrees with us, or if our
idea is correct.
In a lot of conversation, these tags are not heavily stressed, so the intonation is often a gentle
falling intonation.
However, if you give the question tag a strong and rising intonation, then you show either
surprise or that you are really asking a question.
So, you should probably use questions tags a lot when you are chatting with friends or making
polite conversation with strangers. If you combine a tag with a comment about the weather
you are sure to start up a conversation. In the summer, just say, "It's hot today, isn't it?" And
someone will reply. Or, on a rainy winter's day, say "It's been an awful day today, hasn't it?"
And certainly someone will reply to your tag.
Gareth Rees has been an English language teacher and teacher trainer for over 10 years. He
is currently a lecturer at London Metropolitan University and his first course book for
English Language learners is due to be published in the near future.