The bare infinitive form of to do is do. What does [auxiliary verb, conjugated in the present tense with the subject "he"] he do [bare infinitive of to do ]? As TaliesinMerlin points out, it may be helpful to think about this construction as a verb phrase. That term has multiple definitions, but here, we can think of a verb phrase just as multiple words which are used in combination as a verb. Some similar verb phrases with an auxiliary verb and a main verb are he can do and he should do.
What does [auxiliary] she like [bare infinitive]? Where did [auxiliary in the past tense] they go [bare infinitive]? He does [auxiliary, here used for emphasis, not to form a question] think [bare infinitive]! If someone wants to edit this answer with a better example, they are welcome to do so. I can ask "What does she eat? I might be curious because she looks great. In this question, "what" is the question word, "does" is the auxiliary verb, "she" is the subject and "eat" is the main verb.
You might argue why it is "eat" and not "eats" since we're referring to a third person. That makes sense because we add "s" to a verb when we use it with a third person subject.
But, you have to remember that in negatives and questions, we don't add "s" to a verb even with a third person. We just add "does not" or "does he eat? Note that the same question becomes "What do you eat? Everything remains the same except the auxiliary verb being "do" here. Traditionally, the verb "do" is used to ask someone about their job.
In other words, what do they do for a living. Sign up to join this community. The best answers are voted up and rise to the top. Create a free Team What is Teams? Learn more. What he does vs What does he do? Asked 2 years ago. Active 11 months ago. Viewed 22k times. Improve this question. Roman Khomitsky Roman Khomitsky 13 1 1 gold badge 2 2 silver badges 3 3 bronze badges. Add a comment. Am I disturbing you? Come in. Are you laughing or crying? This book is very sad.
Is it upsetting you? But I want to finish it. So do you have a lie-in on Saturdays? Do you have breakfast on Saturdays? I start the day with lunch. Does your sister have a new boyfriend? His name's Kevin. Does he have a car? Do you have a boyfriend at the moment? Note that when we use have got to talk about possession, we need have or has as the question word: Has your sister's new boyfriend got a car?
Have you got a boyfriend at the moment? Does your mom like chicken nuggets? Both can replace a main verb when the meaning is obvious. How do you do that? How does he do that? Example: Do your homework. Example: Does your homework. I want to do my best in this race. That does not make any sense. We do not care about imaginary creatures. I do love a good comedy. They can do better than that.
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