[Gedeactiveerde gebruiker]
which question is grammatically correct? what does not she like? or what she does not like? i am really confused sometimes the simplest seems the hardest
12 mrt. 2008 20:15
Antwoorden · 5
1
Yes you are right . You merge "does not " into "doesn't " and the right grammatically correct sentence would be "What doesn't she like ?" Or you better say "What are the things she doesn't like ?"
12 maart 2008
The correct answer is: What does she not like? The only way you could use the other sentence is if you used it like this: "This is what she does not like." But this is a statement not a question.
22 maart 2008
yes neither of the question is correct. if v look for the perfect grammer sentence it would be " what does she not like? " but usually in speaking ppl use " what does't she like? " The easy way to get over the prob the simple rule is this that u take the auxillary verb (do, does, did) at the start of the sentence ( if W family is present then after it) in the other one u asked "what she does not like" is incorrect because the "does" should't be follow the subject as explained earlier. Hope u get the point for anyother info ,free to ask.
13 maart 2008
Hello agca, i speak perfect english. If you need any questions answered, you can ask me. please add me as your friend
13 maart 2008
Neither question is correct!!! The correct ways are: 1. What doesn't she like? 2. What does she not like? Confusing, huh?
13 maart 2008
Heb je je antwoorden nog steeds niet gevonden?
Schrijf je vragen op en laat de moedertaalsprekers je helpen!