Tag questions for 'I am having dinner', 'She is having dinner.'

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Rachel Adams

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Hello.

Are tag questions with 'have' common when used in the progressive in such examples as mine?
'She is having dinner, isn't she?'
'I am having dinner', aren't I?'
 
I don't now what you'd call common, but both are possible.

Interesting if 'Is she not?' and 'Are I not?' the formal/old-fashioned forms which are also used for emphasis are possible too. Are they?
 
'Are I not' has never been used, as far as I know,
I see. Thank you.
Is it true that 'amn't I' used to be an acceptable form? In modern English native speakers use 'aren't I' instead.
 
Not that I know of.

If you ignore the spelling of arent' I?, it is simply one of a number of verbs that change their vowel sound in negative contractions:

can -can't (in Br E)
shall -shan't
am = aren't

do - don't
will - won't

One more question, if you please. These forms 'Is she not?', 'Does she not?', 'Has she not?', 'Do you not?' they are now formal and old-fashioned and used for emphasis. But before they became old-fashioned, they were acceptable forms. Right? Just like 'have' was used without 'do'? As in 'Have you a dog?' Instead of 'Do you have a dog?' And 'Had you a car?' Instead of 'Did you have a car?'
 
Is it true that 'amn't I' used to be an acceptable form? In modern English native speakers use 'aren't I' instead.
I can't remember who it was, but somewhere, years ago, I had a friend or acquaintance who always said "amn't I". It was rather an affectation, but it didn't stick out terribly.
 
One more question, if you please. These forms 'Is she not?', 'Does she not?', 'Has she not?', 'Do you not?' they are now formal and old-fashioned and used for emphasis. But before they became old-fashioned, they were acceptable forms. Right? Just like 'have' was used without 'do'? As in 'Have you a dog?' Instead of 'Do you have a dog?' And 'Had you a car?' Instead of 'Did you have a car?'
Jane Austen's early nineteenth-century upper-class English characters say am not I? and the like. We have no reason to think she wasn't reproducing actual speech she might have heard at the time.
 
Jane Austen's early nineteenth-century upper-class English characters say am not I? and the like. We have no reason to think she wasn't reproducing actual speech she might have heard at the time.

I just remembered a poem The Fly by William Blake. Am not I a fly like thee?'
 
That was written in 1794, b someone who often used poetic language.

I once read on this forum 'Can you not find it?' It was written by a native speaker. I was surprised that person didn't say 'can't you find it?' But that was before I asked my question and you said that such forms ('Am I not?' Do you not?' 'Does she not?' 'Will I not?') are formal and used for emphasis.
 
That was written in 1794, by someone who often used poetic language.
Was it also common not to use 'did' with 'have'?

'You had a car, hadn't you?' 'Had you not?'
'You hadn't a car, had you?'
 
Was it also common not to use 'did' with 'have'?

'You had a car, hadn't you?' 'Had you not?'
'You hadn't a car, had you?'
Those look like believable constructions for the eighteenth and early nineteenth century, but they wouldn't understand the word "car".

See 1:54:
 
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