
What do or what does? - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
Nov 25, 2016 · In "What do/does a baby Range Rover and Altoids have in common?" the subject of the composite verb "do/does have" is "a baby Range Rover and Altoids", which is plural.
Asking a question: DO or ARE? - English Language Learners Stack …
May 14, 2017 · When should you ask a question with "do", and when with "are"? In other words, Are you going to Spain next week? Do you like Chinese food? What is the rule here? We don't sa...
modal verbs - "be to do" versus "have to do" - English Language ...
The good news is that most of the time " have to " and " be to " are interchangeable when referring to orders. In the two sentences you have given, the second means that someone told you to do it. It is …
We have vs We do have - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
What is the difference between We have and We do have? Has it same meaning or different meanings?
"Do you know what IS IT?" vs "Do you know what IT IS?"
1) Do you know what is it? 2) Do you know what it is? I kinda do a Google research on this and basically most people say it should be the first one but unfortunately the correct one is the second one. Why it …
What we do? vs. What do we do? - English Language Learners Stack …
What do we do? is an interrogative sentence asking what course of action one should proceed with. The first do is one of those so-called auxiliary verbs in English that are used to form questions. The …
"What do you have me do?" or "What do you have me TO do?"
"What do you have me do?" is grammatical but only in rare contexts. If you've already started doing a job, but had a sudden moment of doubt, you could ask your employer "What do you have me do?" …
“to not do” or “not to do” - English Language Learners Stack ...
Specifically with the following sentence, which is more suitable/correct? You don't count on humans to not do things they're used to doing. You don't count on humans not to do things they'r...
usage - "Do you know" vs. "Did you know" - English Language Learners ...
Mar 2, 2021 · For example "Do you know that the 8:40 train has been cancelled?". "Did you know?" is used, in my experience, for interesting rather than immediately useful information such as "Did you …
"His brother is not so / as tall" – Do ‘so’ and ‘as’ mean the same?
Feb 7, 2025 · not so tall could mean (colloquially) that his brother is not a tall person at all. Or not quite as tall. not as tall tends to be a simpler relative comparison. If you want to express the simple …