Dec. 15, 2021
Yesterday, I heard a sentence,but I didn't understand why I answer like: Yes, I do.
This is a sentence:
Do you have an umbrella?
Yes,I do.
Thank you for helmping.
Yesterday, I heard a sentence, but I didn't understand why I answer like: Yes, I do.
This is athe sentence:
Do you have an umbrella?
Yes, I do.
Thank you for helmping.
Feedback
Hmm. I am not an English teacher, but I will try to explain.
You can make a question from lots of statements by adding "do" or "does" to the start. Eg.
"You have an umbrella." -> "Do you have an umbrella?"
"You eat chocolate." -> "Do you eat chocolate?"
"Sarah runs quickly." -> "Does Sarah run quickly?"
"He sleeps." -> "Does he sleep?" (The word "sleep" changes here too).
All of these questions can be answered by subject + do/does + (optionally) the rest of the statement
"Do you have an umbrella?" "I do." or "I do have an umbrella."
"Do you eat chocolate?" "I do." or "I do eat chocolate."
"Does Sarah run quickly?" "Sarah does." or "She does." or "Sarah does run quickly."
"Does he sleep?" "He does." or "He does sleep."
I'm not sure if this was helpful at all, but if not hopefully someone else will explain better. Good luck!
This is a sentence: This is |
Do you have an umbrella? This sentence has been marked as perfect! |
Yes,I do. Yes, I do. |
Thank you for helmping. Thank you for hel |
A question. |
Yesterday, I heard a sentence,but I didn't understand why I answer like: Yes, I do. Yesterday, I heard a sentence, but I didn't understand why I answer like: Yes, I do. |
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