To be is to do — To do is to be — Do-be-do-be-do: what does this . . . Upvoting indicates when questions and answers are useful What's reputation and how do I get it? Instead, you can save this post to reference later Continue to help good content that is interesting, well-researched, and useful, rise to the top! To gain full voting privileges,
How to vs. How do I - English Language Usage Stack Exchange 2 How do I always refers to yourself as the asker, or another asker if quoted or referenced e g She asked "How do I do this?" How to however does not make this distinction and can be used more flexibility For example: I said how to fix it? I said how do I fix it? These both mean different things
Is it better to say How do I. . . or How can I. . . ? [duplicate] "How can I do that" can be taken to mean that you didn't know you could do that, which can be asked rhetorically to imply that doing something is so against one's nature they do not believe it possible "How do I do that" implies that the speaker knows or believes it is possible, but simply lacks instruction as to procedure
Do you know what IS IT? vs Do you know what IT IS? 1) Do you know what is it? 2) Do you know what it is? I kinda do a Google research on this and basically most people say it should be the first one but unfortunately the correct one is the second one Why it is so? If we refer to the rule of making question (WH-word + verb to be verb to have + subject + verb + description)
Do you really answer How do you do? with How do you do? I would feel insulted if someone responded to my "How do you do" with another "how do you do" If you dont mean to ask people how they are doing, then hello, goodmorning, etc should suffice