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Poser des questions?

Poser des questions?. U4 A p 174-175. 4 ways for information questions (yes/no). * Intonation Tu aimes le chocolat? * Est-ce que/qu’ (yes/no answer) Est-ce que tu aimes le chocolat? Où est-ce que tu manges? * Inversion (more formal way) Aimes-tu le chocolat? *N’est-ce pas ?.

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Poser des questions?

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  1. Poser des questions? U4 A p 174-175

  2. 4 ways for information questions (yes/no) * Intonation Tu aimes le chocolat? * Est-ce que/qu’ (yes/no answer) Est-ce que tu aimes le chocolat? Où est-ce que tu manges? *Inversion (more formal way) Aimes-tu le chocolat? *N’est-ce pas ?

  3. Inversion goes: verb - subject pronoun • Always use a hyphen between your verb and subject pronoun. Fait-il du foot? As-tu besoin d’aller au parc? Parlez-vous français? Regardent-ils le match? • Inversion with “je”is very uncommon, instead use “est-ce que”. Fais-je du foot? Est-ce que je fais du foot? • When “il, elle, or on” are the subjects of a question & the verb form ends in a vowel, add a “t” between the verb and the pronoun. The “t” is pronounced . Parle-t-elle français? Mange-t-il un sandwich? Va-t-on aller au match de foot?

  4. Sujet=nom? If the subject of the sentence is a noun, keep the noun but attach the corresponding subject pronoun to the verb: Pierreparle français Pierre parle-t-il français? Les filles vont au parc Lesfillesvont-ellesau parc?

  5. N’est-ce pas? (yes/no) In spoken French, you may add “n’est-ce pas” to the end of a sentence to ask a question. It means “isn’t that so” but may be interpreted in various way depending on context. Tu aimes les frites, n’est-ce pas? Vous allez au concert, n’est-ce pas?

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