Définition & Structure
Yes/No Question: Auxiliary + Subject + Verb?
Réponse: Yes, ... / No, ...
Réponse: Yes, ... / No, ...
Structure de base:
Do/Does/Did + S + V + ?
Are/Is/Were + S + ...?
Can/May/Must + S + V + ?
Are/Is/Were + S + ...?
Can/May/Must + S + V + ?
Exemples simples:
Do you like coffee? → Yes, I do / No, I don't
Is she French? → Yes, she is / No, she isn't
Can you swim? → Yes, I can / No, I can't
Is she French? → Yes, she is / No, she isn't
Can you swim? → Yes, I can / No, I can't
Règles fondamentales
Toujours une auxiliaire au début
Inversion sujet-verbe
Réponse courte: Yes/No + sujet + auxiliaire
Pas de mot interrogatif spécifique
Types de questions oui/non
Present Simple: Do/Does + S + V?
Past Simple: Did + S + V?
To Be: Am/Is/Are + S?
Modaux: Can/May/Must + S + V?
Formules de réponse
Affirmatif:
Yes, subject + auxiliary
Ex: Yes, I do / Yes, she is / Yes, we can
Ex: Yes, I do / Yes, she is / Yes, we can
Négatif:
No, subject + auxiliary + not
Ex: No, I don't / No, she isn't / No, we can't
Ex: No, I don't / No, she isn't / No, we can't
Conseils & Astuces
Identifiez l'auxiliaire dans la phrase affirmative
Placez l'auxiliaire au début pour former la question
La réponse suit la même auxiliaire que la question
Pratiquez avec des phrases positives/négatives
Les questions To Be n'utilisent pas Do/Does/Did
Exemples de pratique
Exercice 1:
Transformez: "She likes apples" → "Does she like apples?"
Exercice 2:
Répondez: "Are you tired?" → "Yes, I am" ou "No, I'm not"
Exercice 3:
Identifiez: "Can you help me?" → Modal question