搜尋自 英語 {1} 教師……
Giovana Silva
What is the difference between "I like you" and "I do like you"?
2013年4月20日 01:02
解答 · 7
1
I think 'I do like you' has more emphasis than just 'I like you'.
I think this could be used, in something like, I don't know it's correct, but an example: "You don't like me, but I do like you." that is some like "Despite you don't like me, I like you".
2013年4月20日
1
If you just want to tell someone you like them, "I like you" is the most common and natural way to say it. Simple.
But, you can say "I do like you" to answer specific questions or to provide emphasis. So it's not really a replacement for "I like you".
You might use it to give some background before explaining more.
I do like you, but... let's just be friends.
You can also use it for emphasis or to contradict what someone else says.
A: You don't like me.
B I DO like you. (emphasis on the word "do")
2013年4月20日
1
In my side ,"I like you" and "I do like you" are the same meaning.It is the degree that counts.The latter is emphasizing but the first one is not.Also,the second one means "I like you very much" or "I like you surely."
2013年4月20日
Imagine someone asking you 'Do you like me?' you may answer 'I do like you indeed', or 'I do like you as a friend' etc ... 'do' is an auxiliary verb that intensifies or stresses the main verb - do like, do read, don't eat, don't dance ...
2013年4月20日
還沒找到你要的答案嗎?
寫下你的問題,讓母語者來幫助你!
Giovana Silva
語言能力
英語, 法語, 葡萄牙語
學習語言
英語, 法語
你也許會喜歡的文章

How to Ask for a Raise or Promotion in English
9 讚 · 8 留言

The Key to Learning a Language Faster
30 讚 · 8 留言

Why "General English" is Failing Your Career (An Engineer’s Perspective)
30 讚 · 12 留言
更多文章
