You’re not connected! You probably should if you want to save your progress.

Questions & Responses

Welcome to your Questions & Responses lesson! In this topic we talk about:
• The two types of questions
A few numbers
Responding by “Yes” or “No”
Asking for things
Question words
Take the quizzes when you’re ready! If you’re having problems, use the comment box to contact our English Teachers.

The two types of questions

  • Closed questions (whose answers are either “yes” or “no”) start with an auxiliary:

“Is Steve English?”

“Are you twelve?”

  • Open questions start with a question word:

“What’s your name?”

“How old are you?”

A few numbers

13 = thirteen 14 = fourteen 15 = fifteen 16 = sixteen
17 = seventeen 18 = eighteen 19 = nineteen 20 = twenty
21 = twenty-one 22 = twenty-two 23 = twenty-three 24 = twenty-four
30 = thirty 40 = forty 50 = fifty 60 = sixty
70 = seventy 80 = eighty 90 = ninety 100 = a hundred (one hundred)
101 = a hundred and one 102 = a hundred and two 103 = a hundred and three 104 = a hundred and four

Responding by “Yes” or “No”

When the first word of a question is an auxiliary, the response starts with “Yes” or “No”. We never use “Yes” or “No” alone in a short question.

  • We follow “Yes” by a subject pronoun and the auxiliary:

“Is Bob English?”
“Yes, he is.”

“Are you happy?”
“Yes, I am.”

  • We follow “No” by a subject pronoun, the auxiliary, then the negative:

“Is Bob English?”
“No, he’s not.”

“Are you sad?”
“No, I’m not.”

Asking for things

When we ask about something or someone, we have to use a question word:

“Where are you from?”
“I’m from Manchester.”

“What colour is your bus?”
“It’s blue.”

“Who is this girl?”
“She’s my cousin, Stephanie.”

Question words

To ask about:

An object or an activity, use: What

The identity of people, use: Who

Age, use: How old