Question Tags: Intonation Patterns Exercises
B1-B2 Level
The intonation of a question tag changes its meaning dramatically.
With falling intonation (voice goes down), you expect agreement — you are
fairly sure of your statement and simply inviting confirmation: "It's a beautiful day,
isn't it? ↘" The listener knows you are not really asking; you are sharing an observation.
With rising intonation (voice goes up), you are genuinely asking — you want
information: "You haven't seen my keys, have you? ↗" Here, you truly do not know the answer.
This distinction matters for understanding and producing natural English. When you make small talk ("Nice weather, isn't it?"), use falling intonation to sound friendly rather than interrogative. When you need real information ("The meeting starts at 3, doesn't it?"), use rising intonation to signal that you want confirmation. Native speakers switch between these patterns instinctively. For learners, practising both intonations helps you communicate your true intention — whether you are making conversation or genuinely seeking an answer.
This distinction matters for understanding and producing natural English. When you make small talk ("Nice weather, isn't it?"), use falling intonation to sound friendly rather than interrogative. When you need real information ("The meeting starts at 3, doesn't it?"), use rising intonation to signal that you want confirmation. Native speakers switch between these patterns instinctively. For learners, practising both intonations helps you communicate your true intention — whether you are making conversation or genuinely seeking an answer.
Quick Rule
falling intonation ↘ = expecting agreement | rising intonation ↗ = genuinely asking
- 1.It's a beautiful day, isn't it? ↘ (expecting agreement)
- 2.You haven't seen my keys, have you? ↗ (genuinely asking)
- 3.That was delicious, wasn't it? ↘ (sharing opinion)
- 4.You will be there tomorrow, won't you? ↗ (seeking confirmation)
- 5.She doesn't like spicy food, does she? ↗ (checking information)
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