Some comments on this article have posited that the phrase and usage is older, at least dating to the 1990s. What is the difference between did you and do you in the following two sentences Did you want to schedule a meeting Do you want to schedule a meeting I can't understand this usage for do y. I am studying english and i want to know the main difference between “have you got?” and “do you have?” questions
Is one more formal than the other? You could also say it this way How do you do back has been replaced with an equally meaningless reply It is just an exterior change of convention You are doing well, thank you. 2) do you know what it is
Are you asking whether “do you work” might occur in the conversation in the question Are you asking whether there is some other context in which it makes sense to say, “do you work today” Are you asking whether there is a good way to complete a sentence that begins with the words, “do you work” Each question is answered differently. 2) where do you come from sounds kind of awkward and outdated For example there is a nursery rhyme which goes
Baa baa black sheep, have you any wool There is a similar form have you got a map This is quite common in some british dialects, but is frowned on by some teachers. The contracted form is a single word There's no grammar that results in do not you think, so that word order is ungrammatical You can't uncontract don't in example 4
That's not how english question formation works. You'll need to complete a few actions and gain 15 reputation points before being able to upvote Upvoting indicates when questions and answers are useful What's reputation and how do i get it Instead, you can save this post to reference later
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