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  • grammaticality - Indirect questions using “do you think” - English . . .
    I agree that a "do you know" question is formally a question about the mental state of the interlocutor, just as a "do you think" question But in the case of "know", the expressions "know that" and "know if whether" both exist, and have different meanings, so "do you know that" and "do you know whether" questions have different meanings
  • [Grammar] Do you think-questions and answers - UsingEnglish. com
    Could you help me with the following What is the correct way to agree with the speaker and confirm his her statement in questions starting with "Do you know think etc" if they are followed by a negative information-giving clause? E g Do you think Mary isn't Bob's girlfriend? - No, she's his sister (a) OR Yes, she's his sister (b)
  • Word order in question with do you think and do you know
    The question "How old do you think I am?" is a direct question where processes 2 and 3 are applied So first we have the question word (which is actually two words, "how old"), then the main verb, then the subject
  • Indirect questions: Do you know vs. Do you think - UsingEnglish. com
    1 Do you know where the butter is? 2 Where do you think the butter is?-3 Do you know why he did that? 4 Why do you think he did that?-5 Do you know when the train arrives? 6 When do you think the train arrives?-For these sets of questions I'm wondering why the question word comes after 'know' but before 'think' Thank you for any help
  • What is the difference between what do you think and how about?
    "What do you think" can be taken literally e g What do you think about the game last night? as inquiry about opinion, maybe as start to a longer conversation; in the same example the other phrase works very well, too: How about that game last night(!) However, notice the change of punctuation - typically you would use "how about" if the game
  • meaning - Can you vs. Do you think you can - English Language Usage . . .
    A- "Do you think " is used for asking someone politely to do something E g : Do you think you could pass me my bag? Do you think you can fax this paper for me? is not impolite or insulting B- "Do you think " is used for asking someone's opinion E g Do you think we'll get this finished on time? And why not keep the request simple and
  • meaning - What do you think about lt;this gt; lt;that gt;? - English Language . . .
    Here I give the rules taken from the site below: Sometimes, the difference between this and that is quite subtle We often use this to refer to something (e g an idea or suggestion) that you are about to say and we use that to refer something that you just mentioned: Let’s go to the cinema What do you think about that? What do you think
  • meaning - Difference between think of and think about - English . . .
    I'm here after reading the following text in David Allen's Getting Things Done: The Art of Stress-free Productivity: I suggest that you use your mind to think about things, rather than think of them You want to be adding value as you think about projects and situations, not creating stress by simply reminding yourself they exist and you need
  • grammar - It worths it, it worth it or it is worth it? - English . . .
    I think "worth it" is an adjective phrase So what is "worth" then? Example: You should try spending money on her It worths it You should try spending money on her It worth it You should try spending money on her It is worth it Which one is right? The last 2 are not condemned by grammar checker
  • Meaning of I think so or I guess so in answer to Dont you think. . .
    My answer is based on the fact that "don't" is a contraction of "do not" So, instead of asking the clear question "Do you think he is nice?", they're throwing the negative "not" into the question so it comes out: "Do not you think he is nice?" which is grammatically appalling and no longer a clear "yes or no" question





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