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From Kenneth Beare, English: Do or Make Explained An explanation Use the verb 'do' to express daily activities or jobs. Notice that these are usually activities that produce no physical object. do homework 'Do' for General Ideas Use the verb 'do' when speaking about things in general. In other words, when we do not exactly name an activity. This form is often used with the words 'something, nothing, anything, everything, etc.' I'm not doing anything today. Important Expressions with 'Do' There are a number of standard expressions that take the verb 'do'. These are standard collocations (verb + noun combinations) that are used in English. 'Make' for Constructing, Building, Creating Use 'make' to express an activity that creates something that you can touch. make food Important Expressions with 'Make' There are a number of standard expressions that take the verb 'make'. In a number of cases the verb 'do' seems more appropriate. These are standard collocations (verb + noun combinations) that are used in English. make plans English Translation Articles: English Translation :: Do or Make Explained :: Commonly Confused Word Pairs :: American English and British English :: English Auxiliary Verbs :: English Capitalization
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