Asking Questions
Like a Native
Master indirect structures, tag questions, and conversational flow to sound polite, natural, and genuinely interested.
Can you tell me about your family?
What’s your favourite food?
Do you have a lot of friends?
Warm-up Questions
Is it easy to ask question in English?
Can you ask me a question?
How did you feel when you asked that question?
Is this a correct question?
Some of these questions are wrong. Can you correct them?
You like pizza?
Where have you been?
She can drive, isn’t she?
Can you tell me what time is it?
What kind of music do you prefer listening to?
Why didn’t you told me the truth earlier?
What would you do if you are millioner?
Do you like listen to music?
Start asking questions
Here are some natural ways to ask people about their hobbies using different sentence structures:
What do you like to do in your free time?
You play tennis on weekends, don’t you?
How often do you do that?
What else do you like to do in your free time?
Topic Practice
The Culture of Asking
Understanding the “unspoken rules” of English-speaking countries.
When you learn a language, you learn the grammar. But when you learn the culture, you learn how to connect.
In English-speaking countries like the US, UK, Canada, and Australia, how you ask a question is often just as important as what you are actually asking. It’s a delicate dance of politeness, boundaries, and social rhythms.
The “How Are You?” Illusion
In many cultures, a question is a genuine request for facts. But in English, asking “How are you?” or “How’s it going?” is usually just a greeting—a social reflex. People expect a quick, positive “Good, thanks! You?” rather than a detailed list of your recent life events. It’s the friendly glue that starts an interaction, not an invitation for a deep dive.
Respecting the Privacy Bubble
English speakers highly value their personal space and privacy. Asking direct questions about someone’s salary, age, weight, or relationship status can cause immediate, uncomfortable silence. Unless you are speaking to a close friend, it’s an unspoken rule to stick to universally “safe” topics like food, weekend plans, travel, or hobbies.
The Art of the “Soft” Question
Have you ever wondered why native speakers use so many words just to ask something simple? Instead of asking “Where is the bathroom?”—which can sound demanding—they might say, “Excuse me, do you happen to know where the bathroom is?”
This is called softening. Adding phrases like “I was wondering if…” or “Could you possibly…” creates a buffer. It gives the listener a polite way to answer, and it shows that you respect their time and effort.