Negative tags expect a yes answer.
I have met you before, haven't I? (expects a yes answer)
Positive tags expect a no answer.
I haven't met you before, have I? (expects a no answer)
More examples:
The application was refused, wasn't it? Yes, I'm sorry it was.
The guests won't be arriving today, will they? No, they are arriving tomorrow.
It's a beautiful garden, isn't it? Yes, we have worked hard.
You are not working very hard, are you? No, I'm not feeling well today.
This is not a question, it is a statement with a question mark on the end.
If you are looking to use an internal style sheet, you are going to need to use the <style> tag. This tag has both an opening and a closing tag and in between the two tags is where you list all of the CSS rules and declarations that you are wanting to include. Internal style sheets are used when the rules you are creating are only needed on the page that you are adding the rules to. If you plan on using the rules on multiple pages, it would be better to use an external style sheet and embed the style sheet on each of the pages. An example of an internal style sheet would look like: <style type="text/css" media="all"> body { background-color: #FFFFFF; } p { text-color: #000000; text-weight: normal; } </style>
jejemons tang ina mo
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Simply to use the start tag and add a "/" before the tag name like the following:If you are making a link:... will be the appropriate ending tag.Working with tables?So simply add a slash "/" in front of the tag to end it.There are certain stand-alone tags like the break/return tag and image tag, which are slightly different. Image tag does NOT need an ending tag, and the doesn't either.
A positive statement is followed by a negative tagA negative statement is followed by a negative tag
Tag rugby is a sport that is often played in schools. The rules are the same as normal rugby but you tag people rather than tackle.
The pronoun in the tag must match the subject. The auxilliary in the tag must agree with the tense in the preceeding sentence. Positive with negative tag. Negative tag with positive tag.
The question tag for "you were" would be "weren't you?"
The tag question is "doesn't he?"
She is (positive) beautiful, isn't (negative) she?
She can do it correctly, couldn't she? Is the correct question tag of the statement.
The tag question for "The book was lost" would be "wasn't it?"
Not sure what is meant by 'tag', but it is spelt as one word - Welcome.
The tag question for this sentence is "isn't he?".
ought is a "positive" word, so the question tag should be a "negative" you can replace "ought" with "should" so a possible question tag is shouldn't
It is like paintball mixed with laser tag. Same rules as laser tag but you use paintball guns with rubber ammo.