Negatives and question forms

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Grammar 2 Fichas sobre Negatives and question forms, creado por Jesica Romero el 11/05/2019.
Jesica Romero
Fichas por Jesica Romero, actualizado hace más de 1 año
Jesica Romero
Creado por Jesica Romero hace más de 5 años
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Negatives: - We use not/n't with verbs to make the meaning of a sentence negative. I'm not feeling very well.
In short answers with verbs of thinking and believing, we can put NOT after the verb. - Has Susannah decided to call her daughter Brittany after all? -I hope not!
QUESTIONS: Closed questions start with a form of main verb BE, an auxiliary verb or a modal auxiliary verb. We use them when we want a simple YES/NO answer. - Does your sister still live in Canada? - Yes, she does / No, she doesn't.
Open questions start with a question word like WHO, WHAT, WHERE, HOW. We use them when we want to find out more information. -Why she leave Canada then? -She couldn't stand the cold winters.
When we use more than one auxiliary verb in a sentence, we put NOT after the first auxiliary. We haven't been waiting long.
In questions, only the first auxiliary comes before the subject. Have you been waiting long?
NEGATIVE FORMS AND MEANINGS: .
USES OF NO AND NOT: -We use NO to introduce negative replies. - Have you been here before? - No, I haven't.
We do not combine NO with a verb to make a negative statement; we use NOT. I have not been here before.
We can use NOT + ANY with a noun to express an absence or lack of something. They won't get any help from Janice.
We can usually use either NO ´NOUN or NOT ... A/ANY+NOUN, although NO can be more emphatic. There isn't any reason to change policy at this stage. (neutral statement). There's no reason to change policy at this stage. (more formal/emphatic statement).
We use NO + noun in a number of set phrases. No idea. No point. No good. No use. No harm.
We can use NO with DIFFERENT and with comparatives. No different from. No faster than... No more expensive than...
USES OF NOT WITH QUANTIFIERS AND ADJECTIVES: We can use NOT in front of positive quantifiers to make the meaning of a clause or phrase negative. Not many people want to be referees - it's a lot of hassle and not much money.
We can use NOT + (adverb) with adjectives to make the meaning negative. Those new ferries aren't as basic as they used to be, but they aren't exactly luxurious either.
Putting NOT before an adjective weakens the adjective, but it does not have the same strength as an adjective with the opposite meaning. Particularly if we add an adverb after NOT like TOO or PARTICULARLY. The maths exam was easy. (I'm confident that I passed it) The math exam wasn't too difficult. (I am less confident that I passed it)
We can also use NT before an adjective with a negative prefix. Spanish has a tense system not dissimilar to that of English. The people here aren't unfriendly, but they're so busy that it's difficult to get to know them.
The descriptions above are much less definite than these... Spanish has a tense system similar to that of English. The people here are friendly.
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