 So how's everyone today? It's Friday, like I said, Friday. Everyone should be in a good mood. Do you have plans for the weekend? Yes, but in a good way, in a good way, not in a bad way. So, actually I wanted to ask you, so this weekend will be blank, won't you? What are you guys, if you had to fill this blank in for this weekend, what are you thinking? One word, one word. You're what, studying? Oh yeah, so this weekend will be, well if you were studying, maybe stressful, would that be fun, studying all weekend? It would be great. So why do we say these things, what are we thinking? What are our plans, will it be fun? We say fun, why do we think fun? Do we have plans, the beach, yeah? Traveling this weekend? Okay, what else? Are there any other words? Is anyone having a different weekend? Boring, should we put boring? So you said you're going to the beach, where are you going to the beach? Where are you going to the beach? Okay, how does that sound to everyone? Will anyone be doing the same? The beach? Where? Ah, ice cream. So has anyone been to Lincoln or Sawgrass to shop? No? Never been? Oh, you have been, which one? So where else? Okay, how would you describe Sawgrass to someone who is going? That's true. Do you have any questions about Sawgrass? Oh, I know there. Oh, you've been there? Okay. What did you like, very interesting? So we have shopping, do you have a question? Oh, okay. Shopping, beach, anything else? Any other plans? Ah, that's a big plan. What will you do there? Nice, what are the plans? I'm not going to the beach. Oh, okay, bye, Bruce. Has anyone done this trip before? No? So what will you do in Key West, do you know? Mm-hmm. Do they? Yeah. Balloon. A hot air balloon? That's the porch. They do, they do, they do, they do option there. A hot air, has anyone been on the hot air balloon there? No? How was the hot air balloon? How was the, how was the experience? Okay. Very nice. I've never done that, actually. Has anyone done a hot air balloon before? Parasailing. So that's a little different, right? What's the difference? Explain the difference. So has anyone done parasailing? Yes? How is it? It was fun? Yeah? Would you tell him otherwise? Are you Panera? What is that? Oh, the banana. Okay, so you did a lot. Okay. Key West is beautiful. How would you describe Key West, just? I don't know if she cares about that, yeah. Very good. How was the fish? Dolphin, tilapia, snapper, shark. So, whale, do they eat whale? Do they? I've never heard of that. Ideas? I know. Oh, do they? Ah, the grease, okay. Maybe. So then we have a lot going on. Key West, the beach, shopping. We have a lot going on, the sports. So this weekend will be, I think, fun for everyone. But the opposite would be boring. If maybe you're not doing much. And I understand why I heard a boring in there. So we're looking forward to the weekend is what it sounds like, right? T-G-I-F, like you said before. We don't say that anywhere else. Exactly, very good, right? So maybe we think we are Brazilian, but we are not sure. So we are exactly confirming our checking. You say you are Brazilian, aren't you? Do we know what this is called? Have you guys seen this before? What is it? Perfect, tag questions. That's exactly what they are. These are called tag questions. So you guys have seen this before. Or some of you have seen this before. So, like she said, you are confirming something. You might think that you know something and you are confirming what it is. So if you do not know someone's name, maybe you're like, have you ever met someone and you see them again? Your finger is that you're right, right? Because, you know, you're wrong and you might look like, oh, you can't remember my name. So that's exactly what it is. You guys have seen this before. So, when you do this, the U-R here, what is this called here? This is a tag question. What is the U-R? What would you call that? Do you remember? Have you seen that before? It's a verb. It's called an affirmative verb. Have you seen that? So if you look, U-R. And then there's a negative tag also, right? So, if you say, do you know what affirmative means? First, let's take a question. What does affirmative mean? Yeah, what is affirmative? Right. So, yeah, so you're wondering if you have it right, right? So you're affirming. You're affirming. So that's what these questions are. If you're, you are from, your name is Maria, isn't it? So you are affirming that, that her name is Maria, right? So, so the aren't you here? So this would be an affirmative verb. Because what are you doing? You're affirming, right? This would be the affirmative verb, right? Affirmative verb, right here. So the affirmative verb would be you are Maria, aren't you? You're affirming. You are Maria. That's who you are. You are clarifying. You are confirming, right? So then this aren't you, right here? What would that be? Yeah, very good. So that would be like the negative. That would be like the negative there. So that's the negative tag. So we use this a lot without thinking about it, right? We use this a lot in everyday conversation. We say, if I'm not Brazilian, I'm Italian. Would you, or something like, would you get mad? Or if they got it wrong and you were Brazilian, like they said, you are Italian, aren't you? You said, no, I'm Brazilian. Ah, exactly. Well, what do you think of that so far? That's a compliment. Is that a compliment? Did you say it that way? Now is that a compliment? What is that? Is it a compliment, if you say, from the French part? No. So you say, you aren't Brazilian, are you? So then now it's the opposite, right? We have the aren't here, which is the negative, right? Now this would be the negative. So where is the affirmative in here? Are you, right? Exactly. Exactly, right? So you're affirming. So you aren't Brazilian, are you, right? So that's exactly, so it's the same thing, but switched around, right? So we've seen that before. So it's the same way to ask the same question. So what are we doing in these? What are we, like we said before, we're doing the opposite, right? And we are, like we said, what do these do in conversation? If you use this type of sentence, what are you trying to do? There's question, what are you trying to do? To know the people. To know the people and to, right, to know if it's right. So you are affirming, which is why we say affirmative verb, right? Very good. So I brought in some worksheets that we can work on quickly to kind of drill this, right? So it says, complete the dialogue with the tag questions, right? So that's what we just did here. So the first example says, hi, your name is Angela and then a blank. So then the answer would be, isn't it, right? If you, just like we said, if you meet someone and you say your name is Angela, isn't it? You hope you're right, right? What? Yes, when you, when you're trying, you have a little bit of a doubt and you're trying to affirm or clarify. Exactly, right? So we could do this in pairs or just a few in there, just like the example I just gave. So I'll give you, if you guys want to work together there. Oh, where's your partner today? No, I'm just kidding. Do you want to, do you want to jump in with them? Do you mind if he works with you guys? Okay. No, because it was, remember was. So you wouldn't say didn't. So you say it wasn't your ex. Because you have was, wasn't, was not. So if you say, if you say, good. Which one? The conversation. I like the acting skills there, right? The structure is perfect there. Two Americans having a conversation. All right. So, would you two like to pair up and do the next one there? For number two? Either that last one. And it wasn't your ex. Was it? It was the first one. Was it, right? The ex-boyfriend just called to talk? Is that true? I don't know. You guys think ex-boyfriend called to talk? No? Is that not true? Do you want me to remind you of another one with Sylvan? Sylvan, do you have anything to, won't see? Oh, what about four there? All right. So then we have the last one there. Do you want to do Julia and Sylvan? Very good. Very good. There wasn't, very good. Yes. You can tell me if there was a problem. Very good. Very good. I felt the emotion there. Very good. We've got some actors in here. Some actors and actresses. So you guys did very well on that. So we have seen this before a little bit. The tag questions. Pretty comfortable. Pretty comfortable with it. Sometimes we just ask. And sometimes we are confirming something you think we know. Right? But I think you're right. Maybe we can write it more than perfect. I have a worksheet where I use it in conversation. So maybe if we use it a little more. This one is more of a communication. And so what it does is there's a student A and a student B. Okay. And so what you will do is student A will ask the questions on here to student B. Student B will ask their questions to student A. So student A's first question is when is your birthday? So then student B would say, oh my birthday is January. I had a short conversation. I was born in, B will go. Do you take sugar in your coffee? You go through all of the questions and then at the end you go back. And you see if your memory is correct. You're using tag questions. So for this one, when is your birthday? You would say your birthday is January 22, 1990, isn't it? So then if you practice using the tag questions in a conversation. And it also tests your memory. So if you have a bad memory then you might have trouble, right? So, but this is like a conversation basically. It's like a stage conversation. It's like a planned conversation. So it may help get that experience. Well, Hulia can either pair up with, if you want to pair up with them this time, do it differently. You might have a Hulia and you do it differently. Okay. You can pair up with Ntenendul. You are B? Okay. So she's A. Who's B? Okay. So then you would go opposite of it. You can try. You can try. Yes, correct. That's what, yeah, Hulia would try. It is difficult. Where? Just like this, yeah. So you just flip the negative. So you flip the negative verb and the affirmative tag. So you can do it both ways. Yeah, exactly. So one way you can start off negative you haven't, or you aren't. And the other way you can start off positive you are. And then the negative aren't you. Right. So that's what you, you actually just did perfect exercise there. Yes. So it seems like everyone's pretty much done. On the, did you have breakfast this morning? How did you, how did you do that? Like you did have breakfast this morning, didn't you? You did have breakfast this morning, didn't you? All right guys, so that was the tag question. You guys did a great job there. So we went over the tag questions, affirmative verb, negative tag. We did a nice little exercise worksheet. And then the communication, as you were saying, helped kind of get more experience and practice. That's the end of the class guys.