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You know? or Do you know?
The Next CEO of Stack Overflow“Hope you won't” vs “Hope you don't”“Where he is” vs “Where is he”Didn't you know there+ was/is“Don't I know you” vs. “do I know you”Which is correct? “Did you know?” or “Do you know?”I want to know how to correctly use me and I or you and I in a sentenceWhy “Do I know you” not “Do you know me”?Ambiguity of “I don't know what you know.”Do you know or did you know?When to use know and knows
What difference between "You know my name?" and "Do you know my name?"?
grammar questions
New contributor
add a comment |
What difference between "You know my name?" and "Do you know my name?"?
grammar questions
New contributor
1
What kind of difference are you interested in? Number of letters? Register? Degree of usage? Regionality? Grammar function? Please edit your question to provide more information, as it's currently too short and/or unclear.
– Chappo
55 mins ago
add a comment |
What difference between "You know my name?" and "Do you know my name?"?
grammar questions
New contributor
What difference between "You know my name?" and "Do you know my name?"?
grammar questions
grammar questions
New contributor
New contributor
New contributor
asked 1 hour ago
EugenEugen
1
1
New contributor
New contributor
1
What kind of difference are you interested in? Number of letters? Register? Degree of usage? Regionality? Grammar function? Please edit your question to provide more information, as it's currently too short and/or unclear.
– Chappo
55 mins ago
add a comment |
1
What kind of difference are you interested in? Number of letters? Register? Degree of usage? Regionality? Grammar function? Please edit your question to provide more information, as it's currently too short and/or unclear.
– Chappo
55 mins ago
1
1
What kind of difference are you interested in? Number of letters? Register? Degree of usage? Regionality? Grammar function? Please edit your question to provide more information, as it's currently too short and/or unclear.
– Chappo
55 mins ago
What kind of difference are you interested in? Number of letters? Register? Degree of usage? Regionality? Grammar function? Please edit your question to provide more information, as it's currently too short and/or unclear.
– Chappo
55 mins ago
add a comment |
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
"Do you know my name?" is a grammatically complete and correct sentence.
"You know my name?" is lacking the interrogative helping verbs, and only the question mark tells that it is a interrogative sentence.
Although, it is still used a lot by people, it is not really a well constructed sentence.
New contributor
1
Bella, you're assuming that there's a written question mark. Instead, it could be a transcription of a spoken question, where the context and inflection marks it as a question. If the meaning is unequivocal, then it's well-constructed; elision is a standard element of spoken English.
– Chappo
50 mins ago
add a comment |
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1 Answer
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"Do you know my name?" is a grammatically complete and correct sentence.
"You know my name?" is lacking the interrogative helping verbs, and only the question mark tells that it is a interrogative sentence.
Although, it is still used a lot by people, it is not really a well constructed sentence.
New contributor
1
Bella, you're assuming that there's a written question mark. Instead, it could be a transcription of a spoken question, where the context and inflection marks it as a question. If the meaning is unequivocal, then it's well-constructed; elision is a standard element of spoken English.
– Chappo
50 mins ago
add a comment |
"Do you know my name?" is a grammatically complete and correct sentence.
"You know my name?" is lacking the interrogative helping verbs, and only the question mark tells that it is a interrogative sentence.
Although, it is still used a lot by people, it is not really a well constructed sentence.
New contributor
1
Bella, you're assuming that there's a written question mark. Instead, it could be a transcription of a spoken question, where the context and inflection marks it as a question. If the meaning is unequivocal, then it's well-constructed; elision is a standard element of spoken English.
– Chappo
50 mins ago
add a comment |
"Do you know my name?" is a grammatically complete and correct sentence.
"You know my name?" is lacking the interrogative helping verbs, and only the question mark tells that it is a interrogative sentence.
Although, it is still used a lot by people, it is not really a well constructed sentence.
New contributor
"Do you know my name?" is a grammatically complete and correct sentence.
"You know my name?" is lacking the interrogative helping verbs, and only the question mark tells that it is a interrogative sentence.
Although, it is still used a lot by people, it is not really a well constructed sentence.
New contributor
New contributor
answered 56 mins ago
Bella SwanBella Swan
3786
3786
New contributor
New contributor
1
Bella, you're assuming that there's a written question mark. Instead, it could be a transcription of a spoken question, where the context and inflection marks it as a question. If the meaning is unequivocal, then it's well-constructed; elision is a standard element of spoken English.
– Chappo
50 mins ago
add a comment |
1
Bella, you're assuming that there's a written question mark. Instead, it could be a transcription of a spoken question, where the context and inflection marks it as a question. If the meaning is unequivocal, then it's well-constructed; elision is a standard element of spoken English.
– Chappo
50 mins ago
1
1
Bella, you're assuming that there's a written question mark. Instead, it could be a transcription of a spoken question, where the context and inflection marks it as a question. If the meaning is unequivocal, then it's well-constructed; elision is a standard element of spoken English.
– Chappo
50 mins ago
Bella, you're assuming that there's a written question mark. Instead, it could be a transcription of a spoken question, where the context and inflection marks it as a question. If the meaning is unequivocal, then it's well-constructed; elision is a standard element of spoken English.
– Chappo
50 mins ago
add a comment |
Eugen is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Eugen is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Eugen is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Eugen is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
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What kind of difference are you interested in? Number of letters? Register? Degree of usage? Regionality? Grammar function? Please edit your question to provide more information, as it's currently too short and/or unclear.
– Chappo
55 mins ago