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Hello, there. My name is Ronnie. What's your name? Who are you? Where are you? And what
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are the five "wh" questions in English? Can you name them? Six, I got six. Let's go to
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the board and see. In English, we have five very common "wh"
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questions. People will say the five "wh" questions -- there they are. Repeat with me: who, what,
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when, where, why, and how. Who, what, when, where, why, how; six. Again: who, what, when,
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where, why, how. When I was learning Japanese and Spanish,
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the very, very, first thing that I learned was the five "wh" questions in Japanese and
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the five "wh" questions in Spanish. So I recommend that you remember these in English. You've
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got five -- six very important questions that you can ask anytime, anywhere, at any place
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necessary. You may look at this and go, "Okay, I see
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w-h-o, 'who', w-h, w-h, w-h, w-h -- what the? What?" This confused me as a child. "Teacher,
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why is 'h-o-w' a 'wh' question? What's happening here? What have you done to my young brain?"
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And then I looked at it -- go, "Oh, there's an 'h' and a 'w', hee hee hee. So it is a
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"hw", "wh" question. You've got your six. So let's go through and think about why we
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would use these 'wh' questions for conversation. Have you ever had a really boring conversation
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with someone? I have -- all the time, every day. We say it's "like pulling teeth" to get
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someone to speak to you or have a conversation, which means -- pulling teeth -- it's painful.
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The person is not interested in what you're saying. You would rather talk to the wall
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than speak to this person. So here's how not to be boring when you're trying to have a
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conversation with someone. Someone may ask you a question, for example, "What did you
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do yesterday?" Most of you go, "Nothing." Wow, you're a really cool, exciting person.
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I don't want to talk to you anymore. Bye-bye. So you can say something simple like, "I ate
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dinner." Good. We've got something. So you can then continue the conversation with the
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person and say, "Who? Who? Who? Who cooked the dinner?" And the person says, "My mom."
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Cool, okay, so you know that this person ate dinner -- so they can't be that boring -- and
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then you know that they have a mother: two points.
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Can you think of a "what" question you could ask someone about dinner? "What did you eat?",
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or "What did you mother cook?" Okay? "What did she cook?" And the person goes, "Food".
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And at this point, I would give up and carry on to a different conversation with another
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person like you. So I could say to you, "Hello. When did you
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start studying English?" And you say, "Five years ago." Perfect, okay? So "When did you
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start?" Now, you don't have to talk about English all the time because that's kind of
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boring. Maybe you know that the person does sports, or the person likes drawing or painting,
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so you can say, "When did you start playing a sport? When did you start playing football?"
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Usually people like to talk about football. People like to talk about their favourite
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team -- Manchester United, Barcelona. So if you can start the person talking on something
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they like, your conversation is going to go amazingly.
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So what about a "where" question? Maybe you are at a meeting, or you're in a very awkward
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social situation where you have to speak to people, and maybe the person is not from your
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country. You can ask them a very simple question, like "Where are you from?" And maybe the person
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says, "I'm from Canada." And then, "Really? Ronnie's from Canada. Do you know Ronnie?"
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And the person goes, "No." "Okay, that's good." Can you think of a "why" question you could
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ask someone? Let's talk about food. "Why did your mother cook food?" That's a strange question.
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"Why do you like football?" "Why did you start studying English?" Okay?
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And then this crazy one, "how" -- this is kind of a strange question, but there are
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techniques. You could say, "how long -- how long have you studied English for?", or "How
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long did you live in your home country?" "How long did you work at your job?" "How long
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did you live?" Maybe you're talking to a ghost. That would be cool. And then you say, "Ghost,
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how long did you live?" Okay? "How long did you live in your country?"
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So, what's very, very, very, very, very, very, very important and that I almost forgot was,
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because these are questions, you need to always have a question mark when you're writing.
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When you're speaking, you know the person is asking you a question because your voice
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goes up. So I wouldn't say, "What did she cook." I would say, "What did she cook?" Every
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single time in English, you ask a question -- your voice goes up at the end of the question
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so the person knows it's their chance to answer, and not to be boring.
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You've got homework. The next time you have a conversation with someone in English or
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in your language, think of one of the six "wh" questions you could ask them. Or if you're
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really ambitious, think of six "wh" questions you could ask them to continue your conversation.
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If you'd like more great continuing conversation bits, go to www.engvid.com. Toodles.