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Rami1511 Posted 12 years ago
Grammar

which form is correct?

Hello
which form is correct ?
' I dont know whats going on ' or ' I dont know what going on is'
' I dont know who you are' or ' I dont know who are you'
'' I dont care about what do you think' or ' I dont care about what you think'
in case Im not asking a question. shoud I use 'verb to be' after or before the noun ( you, I ...etc ) ?
  

Top answer

Your sentences are all wrong. These are correct: I don't know what's going on. I don't know who you are.

  • Your sentences are all wrong.
  • These are correct: I don't know what's going on.
  • I don't know who you are.
  • I don't care what you think.
  • CB
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6 Answers
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Your sentences are all wrong. These are correct:

I don't know what's going on.
I don't know who you are.
I don't care what you think.

CB
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Rami1511If I’m not asking a question, shoud I use the verb be before or after the noun (you, I ...etc )?
There is normally no subject-auxiliary inversion in indirect questions. They have basic subject + verb ord
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Thank you
Cool BreezeI don't know what's going on.I don't know who you are.
but is there a rule for it ? I mean why did you put the ( is ) before the noun in the first sentence and then you put (are) after the noun in the second one ? i know they are both not questions. thats why I am asking about the rule
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Rami1511I mean why did you put the ( is ) before the noun in the first sentence
He didn’t.
Did you see my post?
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There isn't a single noun in either sentence. The subject is placed before the verb, that's the rule.

I don't know what is going on.
I don't know who you are.

CB
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Oh my *** sorry I didn't notice it Emotion: sad Thanks

And thanks everyone

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