Thursday, February 28, 2019

grammar - Why you're laughing vs Why are you laughing?

Recently I was talking to my friend in English. He started laughing and I asked him Why you're laughing man?



Someone told me you should say Why are you laughing? and this one is totally wrong.



I got a little bit confused. I know "Why are you laughing?" is correct but I can't wrap my head around it fully that mine is totally wrong.




I represented what I meant through intonation of the sentence and my buddy had no problem understanding it. my question is:



The form I used was totally wrong? and I should stop using it?



I'm guessing in written English this form is wrong and if I use it, it's gonna represent a statement, but in the spoken language, since we have intonation I thought it might be unnecessary to emphasize on being totally grammatically correct for every sentence I'm saying.



Am I wrong?

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