A tag sentence has a short question at the end. Some examples are:
It is supposed to snow tomorrow, isn't it?
Grandma arrives today, doesn't she?
You'll be here for dinner, won't you?
They can't wear jeans for the performance, can they?
Tomorrow is the test, right?
It can also stand for "Title Author Genre" and is referring to the second sentence in an introductory paragraph in a an essay where one introduces the works of literature they will be using for the essay.
As in, "Hey let's go play a game of Tag!"? Yes I believe you would, since your not going to play "a game" you're going to play a specific game, "Tag" to be exact.
My mom forgot to remove the price tag from my shirt. The kids played a game of tag.
The tag question for this sentence is "isn't he?".
The tag question, which is added to the sentence in order to get agreement, would be "don't they?"
The question tag for the sentence "The children went to sleep" would be "didn't they?" Therefore, the complete sentence with the question tag would be: "The children went to sleep, didn't they?" This tag is used to confirm information and reflects that the main clause is in the past tense.
playing tag includes running, speed and a little bit of fast planning.
Nobody knows, do they?
The German word "Tag" is capitalized when it starts a sentence or if it is a noun, but it is not typically capitalized when used in the middle of a sentence as a normal word.
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.
Please provide the sentence in which you would like the word "child's" used.
You came from India, didn't you? For a positive statement use a negative tag. You didn't come from India, did you? For a negative statement use a positive tag.
The tag question for "God is almighty" would be "isn't He?" Therefore, the complete sentence would be: "God is almighty, isn't He?" Tag questions are used to confirm information or seek agreement.