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The simple present tense has three forms: affirmative (I play), negative (I do not play), and interrogative (Do I play?). These forms are used to express actions or habits that are currently happening or are generally true.
NEITHER! "To be" is an irregular verbs which does not need the auxiliary DO to form it's Interrogative and Negative forms. The Interrogative is simply formed by changing places between Predicate (Verb) and Subject (the INVERSION). She is Shelley. Is she Shelley? We are tired. Are we tired? They were in Kent. Were they in Kent? The book was interesting. Was the book interesting? Regular verbs form the Interrogative of the Present Simple with the auxiliary DO/DOES, while the Past Simple Interrogative requires DID.
An interrogative sentence is a type of sentence that asks a question. It typically begins with a question word (such as who, what, when, where, why, or how) or a verb that forms a question (such as is, are, do, or can). Interrogative sentences are used to gather information or seek clarification.
To change a declarative sentence to an interrogative one, you can usually invert the subject and the auxiliary verb, add a question mark at the end, or use a question word like "who," "what," "where," "when," "why," or "how" at the beginning. For example, "She is coming." changes to "Is she coming?" or "Where is she coming?"
The interrogative pronouns are who, whom, which, whose, and what. All interrogative pronouns can be used for singular or plural noun forms. For example:singular: Who is the girl in the blue dress? Whatis her name?plural: Who are the boys on the bicycles? What are their names?
Negative (A+) AG : )
NEITHER! "To be" is an irregular verbs which does not need the auxiliary DO to form it's Interrogative and Negative forms. The Interrogative is simply formed by changing places between Predicate (Verb) and Subject (the INVERSION). She is Shelley. Is she Shelley? We are tired. Are we tired? They were in Kent. Were they in Kent? The book was interesting. Was the book interesting? Regular verbs form the Interrogative of the Present Simple with the auxiliary DO/DOES, while the Past Simple Interrogative requires DID.
positive
To change a declarative sentence to an interrogative one, you can usually invert the subject and the auxiliary verb, add a question mark at the end, or use a question word like "who," "what," "where," "when," "why," or "how" at the beginning. For example, "She is coming." changes to "Is she coming?" or "Where is she coming?"
Combining forms are use in a sentences
The interrogative pronouns are who, whom, which, whose, and what. All interrogative pronouns can be used for singular or plural noun forms. For example:singular: Who is the girl in the blue dress? Whatis her name?plural: Who are the boys on the bicycles? What are their names?
Two forms of punctuation that can be used to create compound sentences are commas (,) and semicolons (;).
The ova forms so that people will use complete sentences.
Verbs have different forms to help construct subjective sentences better
negative
negative
Poignant is an adjective. The noun forms are poignance or poignancy.