Yes it is correct. The questioner by using this form implies that the questioner believes it likely that the person he's asking has thought "how danger". Although questions using 'never' appear frequently in literature or rhetoric, in American English it would be uncommon in general everyday speech.
And it means is it not, doesn't it? Similarly isn't he is a contraction of is not he and means the same as is he not. The word order in your sentence is now very unusual in the full form - but the fact that it is common in the contracted form is a good indication that the full form was common at some point in the past.
If the assertive sentence is a negative sentence, the negative word will be deleted in interrogative sentence and then it will be started with only auxiliary verb. Assertive:- We can not study attentively. Interrogative:-Can't we study attentively? 3. Subject + verb + ext. to do + n't + subject + verb + ext?
In a sentence, the verb which is used along with the main verb or the principal verb that denotes the action done by the subject is called a helping verb. As the name suggests, a helping verb is a verb that helps another verb and is employed in a sentence to modify the tense , voice or mood of the sentence.
1. a)Would you mind telling me which tv series it was? b)Would you mind telling me which tv series was it? which usage is correct? This is a complex sentence with 'which' as a linker and the tone is interrogative (the main clause is also). so, it should be verb+subject? sentence-construction. sentence-structure.
Vay Tiền Trả Góp Theo Tháng Chỉ Cần Cmnd Hỗ Trợ Nợ Xấu.
what is negative interrogative sentence