English, asked by rvravi1414, 6 months ago

He comes here quite often change the following into interrogative-negative questions​

Answers

Answered by Queenhu826
3

Answer:

Negative Interrogative Sentences  

What is a negative interrogative sentence?

As their name implies, negative interrogative sentences (sometimes called interro-negative sentences) are interrogative sentences that are made negative. In addition to asking literal questions, negative interrogative sentences are often used to imply that the speaker is expecting a certain answer or for emphatic effect.

Constructing negative interrogative sentences

As with all negative sentences, we generally form the negative interrogative by adding the word not. Where it appears in the sentence depends on the type of interrogative sentence we’re using.

Yes/No questions

Questions that have either “yes” or “no” for an answer are formed using auxiliary verbs at the beginning of the sentence, as in:

“Do you have a dollar?”

“Are you aware of the consequences of your actions?”

“Have you seen my wallet?”

To make them negative, we add the word not after the subject of the sentence. If not is contracted with the auxiliary verb, however, then the contraction comes before the subject.

Negative interrogative “yes/no” questions usually imply that the speaker expects the answer to be (or believes the answer should be) “yes.”

For example:

“Don’t you have a dollar?”

“Are you not aware of the consequences of your actions?”

“Haven’t you seen my wallet?”

With question words

We can also use the negative with interrogative sentences that are formed with certain question words (who, what, where, and why). These kinds of questions are sometimes called “Wh-” questions, because of the common beginning of each of the question words.

To make these sentences negative, we add not either immediately after the subject of the sentence, or contract it with the linking or auxiliary verb. Unlike the negative form of “yes/no” questions, the negative form of question word sentences can either be literal or be used for emphasis.

Literal questions

The negative interrogative is often used literally for sentences with question words.

Answered by prabhleen643
14

INTERROGATIVE

does he comes here quite often?

NEGATIVE

He doesn't come here quite often

Similar questions