Difference between revisions of "Do"

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(Auxiliary for simple present and simple past)
(Auxiliary for simple present and simple past)
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*It is used both in negative and interrogative sentences to fuse with the grammatical markers of time and person.
 
*It is used both in negative and interrogative sentences to fuse with the grammatical markers of time and person.
 
*In affirmative sentences it is not required.  It ''can'' however be used emphatically (contrastives, tag questions).
 
*In affirmative sentences it is not required.  It ''can'' however be used emphatically (contrastives, tag questions).
**I remember you said they didn't care. In the end, they did care, did they?  Well, well...
+
*:—I remember you said they didn't care. In the end, they did care, did they?  Well, well...
 
*It is also used to <u>refer</u> to the previous main verb in discourse.
 
*It is also used to <u>refer</u> to the previous main verb in discourse.
 
::&mdash;I gave you the keys yesterday.
 
::&mdash;I gave you the keys yesterday.

Revision as of 17:59, 1 May 2021

Forms

  • dictionary form (bare infinitive): do /du:/
  • present tense: does /dʌz/ (3s), do (1s/p, 2s/p, 3p)
  • past tense: did
  • present participle: doing
  • past participle: done /dʌn/


Syntax

Auxiliary for simple present and simple past

do is the auxiliary verb marking the simple past and present.

  • It is used both in negative and interrogative sentences to fuse with the grammatical markers of time and person.
  • In affirmative sentences it is not required. It can however be used emphatically (contrastives, tag questions).
    —I remember you said they didn't care. In the end, they did care, did they? Well, well...
  • It is also used to refer to the previous main verb in discourse.
—I gave you the keys yesterday.
——No you didn't.
—Yes I did. Look. They're right over there on your desk.

Lightweight lexical verb

A sentence like, "yes, let's do that" takes its meaning from the preceding context.

  • Shall we make dinner?
  • We could just leave this until tomorrow.
  • We could survey a couple hundred people and see what they think before making a decision.

Semantics

Make or Do?

Generally you do repetitive tasks -- the focus is on the activity, but when you make something you create it -- the focus is on the product.