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In the phrase "How many people live there?", why we don't use "do"? I learned that in interrogative phrases without "to be", we must use "do" or "does" or "did". Why in the question above, where the verb is "to live", we don't use "do"?
4 de set de 2014 03:34
Respostas · 5
4
This is called a subject question. A subject question asks about the subject of the sentence. In subject questions where we want to ask about the subject, we do not use auxiliary verbs. Who wants to go the cinema? is another example of a subject question.
4 de setembro de 2014
1
"How many people do live there" is technically correct, but old-fashioned. You could still use it today to stress that you want to know exactly how many people live there. For example: If you said "I think 5 people live there" and someone said, "No, that's wrong" You could ask "Well, how many people DO live there?" By stressing the 'do', you are implying that you want to know an exact number.
4 de setembro de 2014
It's a good question, Vitor, and one that confuses a lot of language learners. It even puzzles some native speakers when they are forced to think about it. Iris has given you the perfect answer below.
4 de setembro de 2014
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