Table of Contents
- 1 Which sentence is correct did you go to school or did you attend school?
- 2 Can I use does with who?
- 3 Where did you go to school now meaning?
- 4 Which school do you go to or?
- 5 What is the difference between he goes to school and he go?
- 6 Is “Did you go to school?
- 7 Do you whup your child before he goes to school?
Which sentence is correct did you go to school or did you attend school?
“Did you go to school?” Is correct. Always remember ‘did’ is followed by the base form of the word. ‘Did’ is the past form of ‘do’. On case of question ‘did’is used to show that the question is in the past tense.
Can I use does with who?
Using “Do” and “Does” in Questions For a simple interrogative sentence, or question, “do” or “does” is typically followed by the subject, and then the conjugated verb. If the question starts with “who,” “what,” “where,” “when,” or “why,” the word “do” or “does” can come after that question word.
Can we use does with who?
We use does and is with third person singular pronouns (he, she, it) and with singular noun forms. We use do and are with other personal pronouns (you, we they) and with plural noun forms. For the verb be, we need is or are as question words.
Where did you go to school now meaning?
Where do you go to school? It means “What is the name of the school you attend?” Which school do you attend? However, the use of the verb attend is more formal.
Which school do you go to or?
Either is correct, depending on context. “What school” is more open-ended, implying at least several possible schools in question. “Which school” would generally refer to a choice between a very limited number, usually two or three.
What tense do I go to school?
School verb forms
Infinitive | Present Participle | Past Tense |
---|---|---|
school | schooling | schooled |
What is the difference between he goes to school and he go?
he goes to school vs he go to school. The correct third-person singular form of “go” is “he goes,” not “he go” (“go” is used with “I,” “you,” “we,” and “they”). he goes to school. This is how you say that a male person attends a place of learning.
Is “Did you go to school?
The principal verb of action is ‘go’ which is in present tense. In the second sentence, the auxiliary did and ‘went’ are both in the past tense. Since ‘did’ is the past tense of the auxiliary ‘do’, we can not have ‘go’ in the past tense and therefore ‘went’ is not per “Did you go to school?” is correct.
Did Steve Jobs say I went to school?
These days,”I did go to school,” is only correct in the context of providing emphasis, if Jobs was perhaps saying that for some reason, earlier on in his life, he hadn’t gone to school. If emphasis isn’t necessary, then, “I went to school,” is enough. Seventeen years later I did (finally) go to college.
Do you whup your child before he goes to school?
You don’t want to whup a child just before he goes to school. Or that he goes to school. No, he goes to school with us, but, I don’t know, lately things have been happening, and… He goes to school, studies. He goes to school, he works hard. He goes to school with my son Tom.