The Simplest Lesson on DO vs DOES You’ll Ever See! 🚀
Intermediate Level | January 23, 2026
Read the article aloud on your own or repeat each paragraph after your tutor.
Have you ever been in a meeting, ready to speak… and then your brain hits the brakes because you’re not sure if you should say do or does? That tiny choice can feel weirdly stressful—especially when everyone is watching you like it’s a courtroom drama.
Here’s the good news: DO vs DOES is actually simple. In this Do vs Does Lesson, you’ll learn one rule (and one sneaky exception) that will stop the hesitation—and help you sound smoother in emails, meetings, and small talk.
Do vs Does Lesson: The One Rule You Need
Use DO with: I / you / we / they
Use DOES with: he / she / it
That’s it. If the subject is third-person singular (he, she, it, or one person/one thing), you use does.
Quick Examples You Can Steal
- I do the report every Friday.
- You do great work under pressure.
- We do a quick check before sending.
- They do the testing in the afternoon.
- He does the final review.
- She does the client call.
- It does the job (even if it’s not perfect).
The Sneaky Part: Questions
In questions, do/does comes first.
- Do you have a minute?
- Do they need an update?
- Does he agree with the timeline?
- Does it make sense to move the deadline?
Here’s the key: If you use “does,” the main verb stays in the base form.
âś… Does he work remotely?
❌ Does he works remotely? (Nope—“does” already carries the “-s.”)
The Sneaky Part: Negatives
For negatives, just add not:
- I do not (don’t) have the file.
- They do not (don’t) understand the change.
- She does not (doesn’t) want to rush it.
- It does not (doesn’t) look ready yet.
The “Business English” Shortcut
If you want to sound professional fast, memorize these two meeting phrases:
- Do we have alignment on this?
- Does that work for you?
They’re simple, natural, and they show confidence—without using fancy vocabulary.
A 30-Second Practice Drill
Try this out loud right now:
- Do you need help?
- Does he need help?
- Do they need help?
- Does it need an update?
If you can say those smoothly, you’re basically done. 🎯
Vocabulary List
- hesitate (verb) — to pause because you feel unsure.
Example: I hesitated before answering because I wasn’t sure which word sounded best. - subject (noun) — the person or thing doing the action in a sentence.
Example: In “She does the review,” the subject is “she.” - singular (adjective) — one person or one thing.
Example: “He” is singular, so we use “does.” - base form (noun phrase) — the simplest form of a verb (work, go, help).
Example: After “does,” the verb stays in the base form. - timeline (noun) — a schedule for when tasks should happen.
Example: Our timeline is tight, so we need quick decisions. - deadline (noun) — the latest time something must be finished.
Example: The deadline is Friday at 5 p.m. - alignment (noun) — agreement and shared understanding.
Example: We need alignment before we message the client. - update (noun) — new information or a change.
Example: Can you send me an update after the meeting? - professional (adjective) — appropriate for work and business.
Example: Her email tone was clear and professional. - confident (adjective) — sure of yourself.
Example: After a little practice, you’ll sound more confident in meetings.
5 Questions About the Article
- When do you use do?
- When do you use does?
- Why is “Does he works” incorrect?
- Write one do question and one does question.
- Write one don’t sentence and see if you can say it out loud smoothly.
5 Open-Ended Discussion Questions
- In what situations do you hesitate most—meetings, emails, or casual conversation?
- What’s one sentence you say often at work that you could practice using do/does?
- How do you usually check your grammar when you’re busy?
- What’s a “small mistake” in English that feels bigger than it really is?
- If you could master one grammar point this month, what would it be—and why?
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