How to Use Do in English 5 Levels of English Grammar

Hi, I’m Martin.

Welcome to Oxford Online English!

In this lesson, you can learn all about how
to use the verb ‘do’.

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button in the bottom right.

This is a ‘5 levels’ lesson.

That means you’ll see five sections.

Each section will give you a challenge.

Each section is more difficult than the previous
ones.

The early sections will focus mostly on grammar;
higher levels will test your grammar and vocabulary

skills!

Level one is beginner, so if you’re not
a beginner, you should skip to level two.

Ready?

Let’s go!

Look at five sentences.

Complete each sentence with one word.

Each word is a form of the verb ‘do’.

Contractions, like ‘don’t’, count as
one word.

Pause the video and do it now.

Ready?

Here are the answers.

What do you need to know here?

Use ‘do’ to make negatives and questions
in the present simple

and the past simple.

For example, take a positive sentence: ‘I
like bananas.’

Make a negative: ‘I don’t like bananas.’

Make a question: ‘Do you like bananas?’

If you’re talking in the 3rd person – he,
she or it – use ‘does’ and ‘doesn’t’.

Take a positive sentence: ‘She likes bananas.’

Make a negative: ‘She doesn’t like bananas.’

Make a question: ‘Does she like bananas?’

In the past simple, use ‘didn’t’ to
make negatives, and ‘did’ to make questions.

Take a positive sentence: ‘They arrived
early.’

Make a negative: ‘They didn’t arrive early.’

Make a question: ‘Did they arrive early?’

There’s one exception.

Don’t use ‘do’, ‘don’t’, ‘did’
or ‘didn’t’ with the verb ‘be’,

or with modal verbs like ‘can’.

Verbs like ‘be’ and ‘can’ make their
own negatives and questions, without using

‘do’.

Clear?

If not, you can review this section again.

If you think it’s difficult, you should
study the present simple and past simple verb

tenses.

Focus on how to form negative sentences and
questions.

If everything’s OK, then let’s move on
to level two!

Here’s your challenge for level two.

Your job is to put the words in order to make
a question.

That’s important: you need to make a question,
not a sentence.

Pause the video and think about your answers
now.

Ready?

Let’s look.

What does the first question – what do you
do?

– mean?

It means ‘what’s your job?’.

It’s common in spoken English.

In level one, you saw that you use ‘do’
to make questions in the present and past

simple.

There are different kinds of question you
can make, but there’s another point here.

‘Do’ can be two things.

It can be a main verb, which has real meaning.

It can also be an auxiliary verb, which you
use to make negatives and questions.

It can also do both things in the same sentence.

All these questions use ‘do’ twice, once
as a main verb, and once as an auxiliary verb.

This is extremely common in English!

Anyway, let’s look at some different ways
you can use ‘do’ to make questions.

You can make yes/no questions, which start
with the word ‘do’, ‘does’, and so

on.

For example, see question three.

You can make questions with a question word,
like ‘what’, ‘where’, ‘who’, and

so on.

See question one for an example.

You can also make questions with a question
tag, like numbers two and five.

This can have several different meanings.

You can use a tag question to check something,
when you think you know the answer already.

You can also use it to show surprise or interest.

Here’s a question: in number two, the question
tag is negative – ‘don’t you?’

– but in number five, the tag is positive
– ‘do you?’

Do you know why?

If you want to check information, meaning
that you want to ask a question but you think

you know
the answer already, then the question tag

should be the opposite of the main verb.

That means, if the main verb is positive,
the tag should be negative; if the main verb

is negative, the tag should be positive.

So, ‘you do yoga, don’t you?’

means that I think you do yoga, and I’m
asking to confirm my idea.

Use a positive sentence plus a positive question
tag to show interest.

‘You do taekwondo, do you?’

looks like a question, but it isn’t really
a question.

It shows politeness and interest in the person
you’re talking to.

This form is common when making small talk.

You can also make negative questions, starting
with ‘don’t’, ‘doesn’t’, or ‘didn’t’.

You use these to express surprise or frustration.

Question four is an example of this.

Like number five, this isn’t a real question.

You use it to express an emotion.

When you use negative questions, intonation
is important: ‘Didn’t you do the dishes?’

Let’s move on to level three.

This time, we’ll do something a little different.

Each of these five sentences contains a mistake.

Your job is to find the mistake and correct
it.

Pause the video and do it now.

Think carefully about your answers.

Do you need to add a word, remove a word,
or change a word?

Here are the answers.

Sentence one is an indirect question.

An indirect question starts with a polite
phrase like ‘Can you tell me…’ or ‘Do

you know…’

You use indirect questions when you want to
sound more polite.

Indirect questions don’t use ‘do’,
‘does’ and so on as an auxiliary verb.

This is a common mistake.

In question two, you need to use ‘does’
as an auxiliary verb to refer to another verb

– ‘like’ – which you used earlier.

In most cases, the auxiliary verb you need
depends on the verb tense, not on the original

verb.

The exception is verbs like ‘be’, ‘can’
and so on, which can be their own auxiliary

verbs.

Here, the verb ‘like’ is present simple,
so it uses the auxiliary verb do/does.

In number three, you have a verb – ask – which
needs to be followed by an infinitive with

‘to’.

Here, the infinitive is negative.

You make negative infinitives by adding ‘not’.

You don’t use ‘don’t’, ‘doesn’t’,
or any other form of ‘do.

In number four, you need to know something
about how to use ‘do’ and ‘make’.

This is more of a vocabulary point.

In many cases, you need to remember whether
a word – like ‘progress’ – goes with

‘do’ or ‘make’.

Number five is also a vocabulary point.

There are many fixed phrases with ‘do’,
like ‘do someone a favour’.

After ‘do’, you need a person – ‘do
me a favour’, ‘do you a favour’

– and so on.

So, to review, the topics covered in level
three are: indirect questions, ‘do’ as

an auxiliary verb, negative infinitives, ‘do’
versus ‘make’, and fixed phrases with

‘do’.

Where were you stronger or weaker?

Think about what you know, and what you need
to focus on to improve.

Anyway, time for level four!

Here are your sentences for level four.

You need to complete each sentence with two
words.

One word is a form of ‘do’.

Remember: you must use exactly two words!

Let’s see the answers.

So, what do you need to know here?

In level three, you saw that there are negative
infinitive forms.

There are also negative -ing forms.

Like negative infinitives, you just add ‘not’
to make the sentence negative.

You can see this in sentence one.

Number two is a participle clause.

The meaning is similar to: ‘Because I hadn’t
done anything similar before…’

What about three?

Can you explain what’s going on there?

Remember that ‘do’ can be both an auxiliary
verb and a main verb, and it can also do both

things in one sentence.

Auxiliary verbs can be used to add emphasis;
for example, if you want to contradict what

someone else says.

Here, ‘did’ is an auxiliary verb which
adds emphasis, and ‘do’ is a main verb.

So, if someone asked you ‘Why didn’t you
do it?’, you might answer like this ‘I

did do it.

I just forgot to send it to you!’

You use the auxiliary verb – ‘did’ – to
add emphasis and contradict the other person.

Four and five are vocabulary points.

‘Do your best’ is a fixed phrase meaning
‘try as hard as you can.’

For example, you could say ‘We did our best,
but we didn’t have four of our best players,

so it’s not surprising we lost three-nil.’

‘Do with’ is a conversational way to say
‘want’.

‘I could do with a long holiday’ means
that I really want a long holiday right now!

Remember: you can review any section of this
video as many times as you need.

Here’s a tip: a big difficulty with ‘do’
is that it has so many different uses.

It can be a main verb, an auxiliary verb,
or it can be used in fixed phrases and phrasal

verbs.

So, when you see ‘do’ in a sentence, ask
yourself which thing it is.

Is it a main verb, an auxiliary verb, or part
of a longer phrase?

Getting this clear will help you to understand
how to use ‘do’ more accurately.

Now, are you ready for level five?

Let’s try!

Ready for the hardest challenge?

Here are five of the hardest sentences we
could make.

Your job is to complete them with one or two
words.

One of the words must be a form of ‘do’.

Contractions, like ‘don’t’, count as
one word.

Could you do it?

Let’s see the answers.

Most of the sentences here test vocabulary
points.

For example, take sentence one.

In conversational English, ‘do’ can have
the meaning of ‘be enough, but not very

good’.

If you say ‘it’ll do’, you mean that
it’s not great, but it’s enough for you.

Sentence two tests a grammar point.

Hopefully, you know already that you can use
‘do’ as an auxiliary verb to refer back

to a verb or verb phrase you used earlier.

If you didn’t use ‘do’ here, you would
have to repeat the full phrase ‘his chances

of working for the EU’, which would be repetitive.

However, here you also need an -ing verb.

When you want to use ‘do’ as an auxiliary
verb to replace an earlier verb, and you

want to use an -ing form, or to plus infinitive,
you should use ‘do so’.

‘Do so’ is formal.

In spoken or informal English, you’d probably
say ‘do it’ or ‘do that’.

Three, four and five all test your vocabulary.

In three, ‘get it done’ is a conversational
way to say ‘finish something’.

In number four, ‘doing well for themselves’
means that they’re making a lot of money,

so they have a comfortable lifestyle.

In sentence five, ‘it hasn’t done me much
good’ is a semi-fixed phrase.

If you want to make the phrase positive, say
‘it’s done me a lot of good’.

Of course, you can also use this to talk about
other people.

For example ‘She looks so much happier these
days.

Switching to part time work seems to have
done her a lot of good.’

So, how did you do?

Which topics did you find the hardest?

We think level five is the hardest, because
it tests a lot of fixed and conversational

phrases.

Do you agree?

Please share your thoughts in the comments.

That’s all for now.

See you next time!