Is this sentence correct ? I am not going there , Are you ?
16 Answers
- VyLv 51 month ago
"I am not going there , Are you ?" should be correct as: "That is not where I am going, are you?".
- 1 month ago
They probably won't have been buckling down. ... For all action words aside from be and have, we use do/does or did to make Yes/No ... about the object of the action word, we put the inquiry word before a Yes/No inquiry: ... Just sentences 1 and 3 are right.
- JackolanternLv 71 month ago
I am not going there! Are you? Or, I am not going there. Are you?
The first sentence is about yourself and the second is a sentence about questioning someone else. So, they should be separated by a period.
- 1 month ago
I would separate the two sentences with a full-stop (period). If it were spoken, it would differ according to intonation and spacing between the two.
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- geezerLv 71 month ago
Not quite.
The commar needs to be a semi-colon
and the A doesn't need to be a capital.
I am not going there; are you ?
- ♥Sweetness♥Lv 71 month ago
This needs a little bit of a touch up.
I am not going there, are you?
*No space between the 'e' in 'there' and the comma
* are does not need a capital 'a'.
- Anonymous1 month ago
I am not going there ; are you ?
- Anonymous1 month ago
No. That's a run-on sentence.
Correct: I am not going there. Are you?
Or: I am not going there; are you?
- ?Lv 71 month ago
As these are two independent sentences, you can't join them with just a comma.
You have several choices:
I am not going there. Are you?
I am not going there; are you?
I am not going there - are you? [this should be an 'm' dash but my keyboard won't do one]
- robert2020Lv 61 month ago
Yes.
The grammar is right. Ut it should be two sentences. Any way you have it as one sentence. Which can be done, but then don't capitslize the 'A' in "are you".
Source(s): Native American English speaker, for 68 years.