He eats ice cream - Does he eat ice cream?
He ate the ice cream - Did he eat the ice cream?
He is eating the ice cream - Is he eating the ice cream?
He was eating ice cream - Was he eating ice cream?
They have eaten the ice cream - Have they eaten the ice cream?
He has eaten the ice cream - Has he eaten the ice cream?
He had eaten the ice cream - Had he eaten the ice cream?
He had been eating ice cream - Had he been eating ice cream?
He will eat ice cream to morrow - Will he eat ice ream tomorrow?
He is going to eat ice cream tomorrow - Is he going to eat ice cream tomorrow?
For a simple sentence it is necessary to change the word order to move the verb to the front of the sentence and to add a question mark to the end of the sentence. eg I can swim(statement) changes to Can I swim? (question) The King is dead (statement) changes to Is the King dead? (question)
Question - Does she go? Statement - There she goes!
The verb in the statement is "done."
In English, the verb often takes the auxiliary verb "do" before the subject to form a question. For example, "Do you like coffee?" is a question form compared to the statement "You like coffee." This is known as the auxiliary verb "do" in the present simple tense.
The following changes occur when an interrogative sentence changes to indirect speech : 1.Interrogative sentences beginning with an axillary verb are changed into the indirect speech by using the connective "if" or "whether". 2.The reporting verb "said"changes to "asked,questioned,enquiredof, demanded of"in the indirect speech.Note that "if"is used after"enquired"and 'demanded"only when the reporting verb has an object.
For a simple sentence it is necessary to change the word order to move the verb to the front of the sentence and to add a question mark to the end of the sentence. eg I can swim(statement) changes to Can I swim? (question) The King is dead (statement) changes to Is the King dead? (question)
Question - Does she go? Statement - There she goes!
No. This situation is found in yes / no question using does. For example: She likes pomegranates. Does she like pomegranates? In the statement the verb has an -s. But in the question the do has -es so the main verb is just the base form = no -s
Actually the question was is traveled a main verb
Please rewrite. This question is a statement and does need verb to answer.
switch the noun/verb. "Am I going to the store?" "I am going to the store."
The subject of the verb 'do have' is 'risk factors', which is plural (it can be replaced by 'they'). Therefore the form of the verb must also be the plural form, which is 'do have' ('they do have', not 'they does have'). Do not be misled into thinking that the word 'effect', which is singular, is the subject of the verb 'do have' because it comes first. It is the object of that verb. Because the sentence is a question not a statement, the 'normal' word order for a statement (subject, verb, object) is reversed (object, auxiliary verb, subject, main verb). But it is still the subject that determines the form of the verb.
The verb in the statement is "done."
The corresponding verb to statement is to state.
In English, the verb often takes the auxiliary verb "do" before the subject to form a question. For example, "Do you like coffee?" is a question form compared to the statement "You like coffee." This is known as the auxiliary verb "do" in the present simple tense.
The following changes occur when an interrogative sentence changes to indirect speech : 1.Interrogative sentences beginning with an axillary verb are changed into the indirect speech by using the connective "if" or "whether". 2.The reporting verb "said"changes to "asked,questioned,enquiredof, demanded of"in the indirect speech.Note that "if"is used after"enquired"and 'demanded"only when the reporting verb has an object.
"Would" is an auxiliary verb that is used to express a future action or a conditional statement. It is not a main verb by itself but helps to convey different meanings in a sentence.