polar question
In linguistics, a yes–no question, formally known as a polar question or a general question is a question whose expected answer is one of two choices, one that affirms the question and one that denies the question. Typically, in English, the choices are either “yes” or “no”.
What are the question forms?
If there is a question word (why, what, where, how, etc.), it goes before the verb….Questions in the present simple and past simple.
| Affirmative | Question | Question with question word |
|---|---|---|
| You work at home. | Do you work at home? | Where do you work? |
How are yes no questions formed?
“Yes/No” questions are questions that can be answered with a simple “yes” or “no.” When the sentence contains a modal (verbs such as “can,” “will,” “may”) or a form of the verb be or a form of the helping verb have), the question is formed by placing the modal, “be” or “have” in front of the subject.
What type of question is used to confirm?
Open questions give information; closed questions give confirmation. Open questions give information; closed questions give confirmation.
Is there a ” yes, no ” or ” no ” question?
May 01 2018 09:39 AM “Yes, No” questions are not a set, out of the box option. Whoever has created the form, has likely chosen the “Choice” type and then applied branching to these questions.
Is it possible to change the yes, no question?
“Yes, No” questions are not a set, out of the box option. Whoever has created the form, has likely chosen the “Choice” type and then applied branching to these questions. If you desire to rearrange the “Yes” “No” answers, the best thing to do would be to edit the form and change the answers, and then alter the corresponding branching as desired.
Are there yes no questions and branching questions?
We have a survey that has been created with some yes no questions and based on the answers the user is prompted to another question. The issue is that when we preview the survey the form has the question and answer rendered in a specific way, for example, Then the branching question which is another Yes/No will have the answers the wrong way around
When do you use do in a question?
This is true for sentences with be, sentences that have auxiliary verbs (e.g. They are waiting. She has finished.) and sentences with modal verbs ( can, will, should, might, etc.). For other verbs in the present simple, we use the auxiliary verb do / does in the question.