0
Hans51 Posted 10 years ago
Grammar

Yes, I do / Yes, I know. / Yes, I know it.

A : Do you his name?
B : Yes, I do / Yes, I know. / Yes, I know it.

Are the three replies okay to use for the same meaning?

And must there be an object after the word know or can the object be omitted when they know what it is?

And if you do not mind, could you give me an example?

Thank you so much as usual in advance as usual.
  

Top answer

Hans51 A : Do you his name? " Hans51 B : Yes, I do / Yes, I know. / Yes, I know it.

  • Hans51 A : Do you his name?
  • " Hans51 B : Yes, I do / Yes, I know.
  • / Yes, I know it.
  • "Yes, I know" is not possible in this context.
  • "Yes, I know it" is possible but less likely than "Yes, I do" or simply "Yes".
Free · every Monday

Get the Weekly English Kit 📬

New words, one handy idiom, and a 2-minute quiz — delivered to your inbox to keep your streak alive.

1 Answers
0
Hans51A : Do you his name?
I assume you mean "Do you know his name?"
Hans51B : Yes, I do / Yes, I know. / Yes, I know it.
"Yes, I know" is not possible in this context. "Yes, I know it" is possible but less likely than "Yes, I do" or simply "Yes".
Hans51And must there be an object after the wor

Related Questions