"Am I not", "Does she not?", etc.

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Rachel Adams

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Georgia
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Hello.

These forms below as I have learnt are formal in modern English and can be used for emphasis. Does it mean they used to be acceptable?
"Am I not?"
"Does she not?"
"Has she not?"
 
Two things. One, they still are acceptable under the right circumstances. (Hard to think of one.) Two, I would need to know what came before to decide if I think the expression (whichever one) is appropriate.
 
I would place them on the seldom/never used list.
 
I would see them as old-fashioned.
 
They sound as if they are spoken by a lawyer in a courtroom drama.
 
They sound as if they are spoken by a lawyer in a courtroom drama.

A drama of modern days? Or a drama of a bygone era?
 
A drama of modern days? Or a drama of a bygone era?


I don't know what a real court is like but it is a dramatic convention that lawyers always use rather stilted language in court
 
It doesn't sound like any lawyer I know.
 
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