Making Embedded Questions (Noun Clauses)

Embedded questions, also known as noun clauses, can sound more polite (softer) than a direct question. Compare:

Direct Question: What are you doing ?

Embedded Question: Could you tell me what you are doing ?

As you can see, an embedded question is a question inside another sentence (the question is embedded within another sentence.). The sentence can be a statement or a question. For example:

I would like to know what your name is . (statement)

*Note that the question mark is removed because the sentence is a statement).

The same question can also be put inside another question. For example,

Can you tell me what your name is ? (a question embedded in another question)

Do you mind telling me what your name is ? (a question embedded in another question)

Thankfully, if you are putting a question into a sentence or another question, the grammar rules are the same. Let's review question-types in English before we look at the rules.

Rules for making embedded questions

Do you know how embedded questions are made?

The Two Question Types in English

1. Yes/No Questions: The answer to these questions are "Yes" or "No". Here are some examples:

2. WH-Questions (also known as Information Questions)

These begin with a "WH" question word (Who/What/Which/Where/Why/When/How/How long/How far). These questions ask for information (not a Yes or No).

If you need to review the different patterns for forming Yes/No questions, see this page. To review the patterns for forming WH-Questions, see this page.

Common Phrases to Start Embedded Questions

Question patterns:

Statements patterns:

Three Main Rules for Making Embedded Questions

1. Delete the Helping Verb 'Do/Does/Did' from the Original Question

Do is an auxiliary verb (helping verb) used to make questions. This word is not needed because embedded questions are not structured like questions (they use statement word order, which will be explained below).

2. For Yes/No Questions, Add 'If/Whether'

If the direct question is a Yes/No question, then you will always need to add if or whether (whether is a little more formal) to the beginning of the embedded question.

Direct Yes/No Question: Can she dance?

Embedded Yes/No Question: I wonder if/whether she can dance.

3. Use Statement Word Order (Not Question Word Order)

In a regular question, the subject comes after either the main verb or an auxiliary verb (note: auxiliary verbs are helping verbs such as can/could/would/should/may/might/do/will/ought to). For example:

To make an embedded question, you have to use statement word order, which has the subject before the main verb or auxiliary verb. For example:

Can you tell me.