An affirmative tag follows an affirmative or negative imperative. The tag is usually
formed with will for second person imperatives and shall for first person
imperatives:
Be quiet, will you!
Do
n’t put the rubbish out yet, will you.
Let’s
not argue, shall we.
A negative tag following an affirmative imperative is rather formal:
Come again tomorrow, won’t you.
Exclamative clauses can also have negative tags which function to seek
confirmation:
What a storm that was,
wasn’t it!
How lovely to be going home,
isn’t it!
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300 Question tags and 98 Questions and tags for further description of the
formation of question tags and other tags
A–Z
69
Right, rightly for
right as a tag
NEGATION AND MENTAL PROCESS VERBS (BELIEVE, THINK)
437
When mental process verbs such as believe, imagine, suppose, think are used to
express uncertainty, it is more usual for the negation to be placed on these verbs
rather than on the complement clause:
We
don’t imagine there are sufficient funds to expand the business this year.
(preferred to: We imagine there are not sufficient funds …)
I
don’t think dinner’s ready yet.
(preferred to: I think dinner’s not ready yet.)
Exceptions are the verbs hope and wish, where the negation is placed in the
complement clause:
I
hope you aren’t going to make a mess in the kitchen.
(I don’t hope you’re going to make a mess in the kitchen.)
We’re
hoping England don’t lose their first match against Norway.
I
wish he wouldn’t make so much fuss.
When mental process verbs are used in affirmative short replies, so is added:
Will Tim be at the party?
I’m afraid so.
I guess so.
I hope so.
I think so.
I suppose so.
734 | Negation
Cambridge Grammar of English
If the reply is negative, there are different patterns.
Not is used with
be afraid,
guess
, hope. With think, the usual form is I don’t think so; I think not is a more
formal alternative. With suppose, both forms are possible:
Will Tim be at the party?
I’m afraid
not.
I guess
not.
I hope
not.
I
don’t think so./I think not.
I
don’t suppose so./I suppose not.
NEGATIVE CLAUSES WITH ANY, ANYONE, ANYTHING, ANYWHERE, ETC.
438
Words such as some, somebody, someone, something, somewhere are not normally
used following not. Any, anybody, anyone, anything, anywhere are used instead:
There is
some room at the front of the train.
There is
n’t any room at the front of the train.
(There isn’t some room at the front of the train.)
There’s
someone in the garden.
There is
n’t anyone in the garden.
(There isn’t someone in the garden.)
I’ve found
somewhere to stay tonight.
I’ve
not found anywhere to stay tonight.
(I’ve not found somewhere to stay tonight.)
Following verbs with a negative meaning such as decline or refuse, anything is
preferred to something:
I
refused to have anything to do with him.
(I refused to have something to do with him.)
After affirmative verbs no is used, and with negated verbs any is used. Compare the
following two sentences, both of which mean the opposite of We had some money:
We had
no money.
We did
n’t have any money.
Although these sentences both mean the same, the structure with not … any is
normally preferred in informal contexts. The structure with no is more emphatic
and more associated with formal contexts.
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