1. I am a farmer, ain't I?

2. I am a farmer, aren't I?

(Which one is correct? What is the correct tag question?)

3. Open the door, will you?
4. Open the door, won't you?
5. Don't open the door, will you?
6. Don't open the door, won't you?
(Which ones are grammatical from #3 to #6?)

i cn try to help.

I am a farmer, aren't I? is correct.

Open the door, will you? is correct.

Dont open the door, will you? is correct.

I may understand what your asking me. But the least i can do is TRY to help. Good luck on other opinions.

1 is incorrect.

2 is correct

3 and 4 are correct, but no one would use 5 and 6. In place of 5 and 6, you'd say, "Please don't open the door."

Ada's birthday is not coming up in march

1. The correct tag question for the statement "I am a farmer" is "aren't I?" Therefore, sentence number 2 ("I am a farmer, aren't I?") is the correct one. In a tag question, the auxiliary verb is used in the opposite form of the main verb. Since "am" is the auxiliary verb in the statement, it changes to "are" in the tag question.

3. Sentence number 3 ("Open the door, will you?") is grammatically correct. In this case, the speaker is asking the listener to do something, so "will you" is used to form a polite request.

4. Sentence number 4 ("Open the door, won't you?") is also gramatically correct. Here, the speaker is expressing a negative assumption about the listener's action, implying that the listener is expected to open the door.

5. Sentence number 5 ("Don't open the door, will you?") is not grammatically correct. The use of "will you" in this tag question contradicts the negative command "Don't open the door." To make it grammatically correct, you could change "will you" to "would you" since it aligns with the negative command: "Don't open the door, would you?"

6. Sentence number 6 ("Don't open the door, won't you?") is also not grammatically correct. The use of "won't you" contradicts the negative command and results in an incorrect construction. To make it grammatically correct, you could use "will you" instead: "Don't open the door, will you?"