44.1k views
2 votes
80 a good holiday (is, are) rite the sentences (i) in the Negative form (ii) in the Interrogative form. 1. I shall be sorry for him. 5. Manish has a new school bag. (1) (i) 2. This book has drawings in it. (1) 3. The fairy has a wand in her hand. (i) 4. The watchman has a gun with him. (i) € 0000000 6. Anand won a prize for calligraphy. (1) (ii) 7. He has plenty of money. (i) (ii) 8. Nilima has a younger sister. (1) 00000000000​

1 Answer

2 votes

Final answer:

The negative form of a sentence is created by adding 'not' after the auxiliary verb or before the main verb, and the interrogative form is formulated by inverting the subject with the first auxiliary verb. For sentences without auxiliary verbs in the present simple or past simple, use 'do/does' or 'did' respectively.

Step-by-step explanation:

Grammatical Forms and Usage

To answer your question, we need to know the correct form of verbs, the use of apostrophes, and the choice of words that fit best in sentences. When turning a sentence into the negative form, we typically use 'not.' For the interrogative form, we invert the subject and the first auxiliary verb at the beginning of the sentence and add a question mark at the end. Here are the answers:

  1. Negative form: I shall not be sorry for him.
    Interrogative form: Shall I be sorry for him?
  2. This book has no drawings in it.
  3. The fairy does not have a wand in her hand.
  4. The watchman does not have a gun with him.
  5. Anand did not win a prize for calligraphy.
    Did Anand win a prize for calligraphy?
  6. He does not have plenty of money.
    Does he have plenty of money?
  7. Nilima does not have a younger sister.
    Does Nilima have a younger sister?

User Natorro
by
7.6k points