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schnaps    
n. 荷兰产杜松子酒



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  • Do it versus do that - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    do that is most used when there's a very specific action in question do that can also be used to contrast two different actions, e g "Do that and not this " As a general imperative, prefer do it With the two examples you give above, I strongly prefer the do this variation, as an instance of my second point (we're talking about a specific action)
  • grammaticality - Correct usage of the verb do - English Language . . .
    Nothing wrong with using 'do do" but it just sounds like something doggies do :-) The above sentence: I don't do anything I am ashamed of, but sometimes I do do things I find embarrassing Might sound better if said this way: I don't do anything I am ashamed of, but sometimes I actually do things I find embarrassing
  • To do this or do that or to do this or *to* do that?
    I saw on the bottom of an email: To change your email preferences or unsubscribe from certain messages, click here Is that correct or should it be: To change your email preferences or to
  • To be is to do — To do is to be — Do-be-do-be-do: what does this . . .
    This is supposed to be humorous The first two lines are contemplations on life and are supposed to be very profound They were spoken by very famous philosophers from Greek history who talk about life and what it is to be alive Frank Sinatra was a famous American swing singer around the mid 1900s The Dobedobedobeo is a vocal sound from music of that era It is meaningless, a sound used only
  • Are do be, does be and did be proper questions and negations?
    Well, Do be quiet! is certainly a natural imperative construction And although I wouldn't like to stake my life on it, I doubt there are any syntactic errors in something like Does he be quiet when he's told to shut up? (but there might be a rule saying why Yes, he certainly does be quiet! isn't an acceptable response)
  • grammar - How about someone do something? - English Language Learners . . .
    The full-clause form You are correct: how about can also take a full clause with a subject of its own A common sort of example is “How about we eat at Sparky’s Diner?” Judging by this graph, this phrasing only started becoming common in print around 1980, and in speech it might be only about 100 years old The gerund form with an explicit subject (see below) is older and more formal
  • Asking a question: DO or ARE? - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
    When should you ask a question with "do", and when with "are"? In other words, Are you going to Spain next week? Do you like Chinese food? What is the rule here? We don't sa
  • What we do? vs. What do we do? - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
    What do we do? is an interrogative sentence asking what course of action one should proceed with The first do is one of those so-called auxiliary verbs in English that are used to form questions The second do is nothing more than the main verb of the sentence For example: I've cleaned the room up, done the dishes and the laundry What do I
  • What is the origin of the do construction? - English Language Usage . . .
    Related, but theory-specific explanation for the use of do But really, I think English works this way "because it does", just like many languages leave their question words in situ while others move them to the beginning of the sentence Or how some languages have negative concord, while others don't
  • What is a plural of To-Do? To-Dos or To-Does?
    Google NGram shows "to-do list" beating the other options by a wide margin If you really want to go with one of them, to-dos is the most common, then to-do's, with to-does being dead last





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