Questions 2
Embedded questions with do you know where, and negative questions
Embedded Questions: Do you know where …?
Compare a direct question with an embedded one:
| Direct question | Embedded question |
|---|---|
| Where has Tom gone? | Do you know where Tom has gone? |
| What time is it? | Do you know what time it is? |
| Where can I find the project files? | Can you tell me where I can find the project files? |
| How much will it cost? | Do you have any idea how much it will cost? |
When a question is part of a longer sentence (Do you know …? / I don’t know … / Can you tell me …?), the word order changes. The subject comes before the verb, just like a normal statement.
- Who are those people? → I don’t know who those people are. (not
who are those people) - Where can I find Louise? → Can you tell me where I can find Louise?
Be Careful with Do / Does / Did
In a direct question you use do/does/did before the subject. In an embedded question, you drop it and use normal word order.
| Direct question | Embedded question |
|---|---|
| What time does the meeting start? | Do you know what time the meeting starts? |
| What do you mean? | Please explain what you mean. |
| Why did she leave early? | I wonder why she left early. |
Notice that does and did disappear, and the verb takes its normal form: starts (not does start), left (not did leave).
If / Whether (Yes/No Embedded Questions)
When there is no question word (what, why, where, etc.), use if or whether.
- Did anybody see the error? → I don’t know if anybody saw the error.
- Is the report ready? → Could you check whether the report is ready?
Both if and whether work the same way here.
Reported Questions: He asked me where …
The same word-order change happens when you report a question someone asked.
| Direct speech | Reported speech |
|---|---|
| “Where are you going?” | She asked us where we were going. |
| “What time do the shops close?” | She wanted to know what time the shops closed. |
In reported speech, the verb usually shifts to the past (are → were, close → closed).
Reported Yes/No Questions: She asked if …
When you report a yes/no question, use if or whether — just like embedded questions.
Imagine a job interview. The interviewer asked:
- Are you willing to relocate?
- What do you do in your spare time?
- How long have you been working at your current company?
- Why did you apply for this position?
- Can you speak any other languages?
- Do you have a driving licence?
Later you tell a colleague what happened:
- She asked if I was willing to relocate.
- She wanted to know what I did in my spare time.
- She asked how long I had been working at my current company.
- She asked why I had applied for the position.
- She wanted to know if I could speak any other languages.
- She asked whether I had a driving licence.
Quick Self-Check
Do you know what time the meeting _____?
Select your answer:
Could you tell me where _____?
Select your answer:
I don't know _____ the client cancelled the order.
Select your answer:
She asked me _____ I had finished the report.
Select your answer:
He wanted to know how long I _____ at the company.
Select your answer: