Use "do" when the subject is I, you, we, they, or any plural.
Also use "do" following "to" or an auxiliary verb.
Otherwise use "does."
I do everything.
You do everything.
We do everything.
They do everything.
Parents do everything.
Mary and George do everything.
He does everything.
She does everything.
It does everything.
Mary does everything.
George does everything.
There is nothing to do.
I know what he would do. ("Would" is an auxiliary verb.)
What would he do? ("Would" and "do" go together.)
He can do it.
He should do it.
He must do it.
If you are trying to write a long sentence use seventeen. If you are trying to write a short one, 17.
use have when it applies to you e.g. i have a husband use has when referring to someone else e.g. she has a husband
Yes. However, using "for to" in place of the preposition "to" is considered incorrect. In many cases, the sentence should not be separate from the preceding one, but should be a clause added to it.
Who's is a conjunction, so it should be used when making a sentence using the phrase "who is". The term "whose" is using the word who in the possessive tense.
You use had in a sentence as the past tense of have:When I was a kid I had chicken pox and mumps.
To be clear, one's answer should be grammatically correct.
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You should use the word "that" when you are pointing out or indicating some one person, thing, or idea.
you should buy this car rather than that one.
hey john look should we talk this path or that one
we should use had if the sentence is in past tence
"I have a sentence for you."
You should use the word "I" when it is the subject of a sentence, and the word "me" when it is the object of a sentence or of a preposition. "I want you to understand me." "I want you to listen to me."
you should have a answer
As soon as he does that you should do this.
If it is in the past.
You can use distemper in a sentence in a few ways. One way is to use it in a sentence about a dog.