Overview
Embedded questions, or indirect questions, are questions embedded within another sentence, which can be a statement or another question. They are crucial for polite communication and reported speech.
Key Concepts
Unlike direct questions, embedded questions do not use auxiliary inversion (e.g., ‘do’, ‘did’) and follow standard subject-verb word order. The question word (who, what, where, when, why, how) or ‘if’/’whether’ introduces the embedded question.
Deep Dive
The structure of an embedded question is:
- Question word/if/whether + Subject + Verb
For example:
- Direct: Where is the station?
- Embedded: I don’t know where the station is.
Another example:
- Direct: Did he call?
- Embedded: Could you tell me if he called?
Applications
Embedded questions are widely used for:
- Polite requests: ‘Could you tell me what time it is?’
- Reporting speech: ‘She asked me where I was going.’
- Expressing uncertainty: ‘I wonder why she reacted that way.’
Challenges & Misconceptions
A common mistake is using auxiliary inversion, as in direct questions. Remember, embedded questions use statement word order. Also, the punctuation is determined by the main clause; if the main clause is a statement, it ends with a period.
FAQs
Q: What is the difference between direct and embedded questions?
A: Direct questions invert subject-verb order and often use auxiliaries. Embedded questions follow statement word order.
Q: When do I use ‘if’ versus ‘whether’ in embedded questions?
A: Use ‘if’ or ‘whether’ when the direct question is a yes/no question. ‘Whether’ is often preferred before ‘or not’.
Q: Do embedded questions always end with a question mark?
A: No, they end with a period if the main sentence is a statement.