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  • What is your name?’ orwhat your name is?’ hi everybody my name is Hridhaan and

  • I welcome each one of you with a very big heart on Let's Talk. In today's lesson we

  • will understand how to correctly form questions and speak better English. But first of all

  • before we start, if you haven't subscribed to my channels and if you like my videos,

  • I'd really appreciate if you do that right away. Let's get started, when we make questions

  • in English, there is a very important rule that I would like to introduce you to today,

  • and that is called the QUASI rule. According to the QUASI rule, theQUstands for

  • question words’, and do you know what are those question words? Can you guess? It

  • is also called five Ws, one H, five Ws, one H. Such as, ‘what’, ‘when’, ‘why’,

  • where’, ‘who, andhowthese words in English language are called question words

  • or five Ws, one H. So when we construct a question, the first step is to write the question

  • word, this is step number one. The next step is, writing the auxiliary, so if you see here,

  • this is number two, the ‘A’ here stands for auxiliary, but what is the meaning of

  • auxiliary verb? It is very simple, it primarily means words such as, ‘is’, ‘am’, ‘are

  • in the past, it becomes, ‘wasorwerevery simple. The next step is to write, ‘S’,

  • can you guess what is step number three, ‘S’? It issubject’, so if you guessed it

  • like that, you are correct. But what is a subject? A subject means the person, to whom

  • the question is asked. The person to whom the question is about. For example, it could

  • be, ‘he’, ‘she’, ‘itin plural it becomesthey’, ‘we’, ‘you’,

  • etc. and also the name of a person, such as, Hridhaan. And finally the fourth step and

  • the last step is, ‘I’. The ‘I’ in the question stands forinfinitiveor

  • information’. Please don't get confused because I will tell you what is an, ‘infinitive’,

  • an infinitive is a word withtoor withoutto’. Basically a word withouting

  • is called infinitive or in extra information, you could be asking the person's name, job,

  • age, etc. Now let's put all of these four steps in the form of examples on your right

  • hand side. In the first example, as you can see, the question is, ‘what’, which is

  • the question word, ‘Iswhich is the auxiliary, ‘yourwhich is the subject, and finally

  • name’, is this an infinitive or information? It is an information that I seek to ask from

  • the person. So the question is, “what is your name?” and this is what people get

  • confused with most of the times, it is not, “what your name is?”, it is, “what is

  • your name?” People confuse between subject and auxiliary and they interchange their positions.

  • But we do not have to do that, now you know the QUASI rule, make questions like that please.

  • Next question is, “what does she want?” ‘whatquestion would, ‘doesnow

  • you must be wondering, Hridhaan did not say thatdoesis one of the auxiliary verbs,

  • but let me tell you, it is, ‘do’, ‘does’, ‘has’, ‘have’… they are all called

  • auxiliary verbs, so I will write it here for you, ‘does’, ‘do’, ‘has’, ‘have’.

  • The next one in the list is, “how does it work?” Let's go back to the previous one

  • for a second, ‘what does she want?’ in this examplesheis the subject and

  • wantis the infinitive. I am asking the lady, the girl, what is she's seeking

  • from me? She's asking me for something and I'm asking her back, ‘what does she want?’

  • from somebody else. Next one is, “how does it work?” ‘howquestion word, ‘does

  • auxiliary’, ‘itis the subject, ‘workis the infinitive. Imagine there is a machine,

  • such as a computer and I do not know how it starts and I ask, it's a modern computer,

  • let's say it's the updated version of an Apple MacBook pro and i do not know how it starts,

  • so I asked my friend, ‘how does it work?’, ‘how does it start?’ Next one in the list

  • is, “when did it go?” Notwhen it did go?’ a lot of people actually speak like

  • that, ‘when did it go?’ The next example, “where is my phone?” I have lost my phone

  • and I'm asking my mom, ‘where my phone is’? orwhere is my phone?” ‘wherequestion,

  • Isauxiliary, ‘mysubject, ‘phoneinformation. I asked my mom for my missing

  • phone, ‘where is my phone?’ if you see we are following the same pattern as the QUASI

  • rule, QU + A + S + I “question”, “auxiliary” ‘is’, ‘am’, ‘are’, ‘was’,

  • were’, ‘do’, ‘does’, ‘has’, ‘have’… “subjectandinfinitive

  • or information”. In the second last example we have question word, “why did you do that?”

  • thatbeing the extra information here, so somebody did something and now I'm asking

  • that person, the reason why that person did that, I asked, ‘why did you do that?’

  • and the last question in the list is, “who did you meet?” Let's say my friend went

  • to a celebrity party, there the person met a lot of people and now I'm very excited,

  • I want to ask my friend who did he or she meet and I say, “who did you meet?” the

  • question becomes, ‘question word’, ‘auxiliary’, ‘subjectandinfinitive’… this

  • is what this is all that we have in the QUASI rule for today. If you did not understand

  • it I recommend you please watch it again. This is the simplest rule that we follow,

  • when it comes to making questions in English. Thank you for watching my video, please consider

  • me a friend and do let me know with the comment, anything that you would like to learn in the

  • recent future. Have a great day ahead and God bless.

What is your name?’ orwhat your name is?’ hi everybody my name is Hridhaan and

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QUASI Rule to Form Questions in English|WH単語と助動詞の構造|文法の間違いを直す (QUASI Rule To Form Questions In English | WH Words & Auxiliary Verb Structure | Fix Grammar Mistakes)

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    林宜悉 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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