Have and Do: Usage
Klíčové pojmy: Use do-support for questions and negatives in simple present/past with lexical verbs, Have (stative) denotes possession; have (dynamic) denotes actions/experiences, Have (dynamic) accepts progressive: I am having coffee, Have got expresses possession and allows inversion: Have you got...?, Do is required in emphatic/persuasive forms: Do come in!, Present perfect forms: have had, has had; past perfect: had had, Don’t use have got to replace dynamic have (not: I'm having got), Use don’t/doesn’t/didn’t in neutral written style rather than contracted haven’t in simple tenses, Do as a lexical verb: doing, did, done with meanings like perform or work at, Use modal/auxiliary exceptions: some auxiliaries remove need for do-support
## Introduction
This guide explains how native-like English expresses possession and routine actions using *have* and how the neutral operator *do* functions in negation, question formation, emphasis and as a lexical verb. You will get clear rules, comparisons, examples, and practice tips for accurate use in speech and writing.
> Definition: *Have* expresses possession, certain experiences and activities; it can be stative or dynamic depending on meaning.
> Definition: *Do* functions both as a dummy operator used to form negatives, questions and emphatic statements in simple tenses, and as a lexical verb meaning perform or carry out an action.
## 1. HAVE: possession vs actions/experiences
### 1.1 Have as possession (stative)
- Use when describing ownership or relationships: I have a car; She has three siblings.
- In British English, negatives with possession are often formed with the operator *do/does/did + not* rather than contracted forms of *have*: Do you have a pen? I do not have a pen. In spoken BrE you may also hear *I haven’t got a car* when using *have got*.
> Definition: *Have got* is used to express possession and allows inversion in questions: Have you got a new coat?
Examples:
- Do you have sugar in your coffee? (simple present question with do)
- I don’t have sugar. (simple present negative with do)
- Have you got a new coat? (inversion with have got)
- I haven’t got a car. (negative with have got)
### 1.2 Have as a dynamic verb (eat, take, enjoy, experience)
- When *have* means take/eat/experience it is dynamic and accepts progressive forms: I am having coffee (action in progress).
- This dynamic meaning behaves like other lexical verbs: form questions and negatives in simple tenses with *do/does/did*.
Examples:
- I have some coffee here. (stative possible reading)
- I am having coffee. (dynamic; present progressive)
- Did you have a nice trip? I didn’t have a nice trip.
Note: *Have got* cannot replace *have* when *have* is dynamic. Do not say *I’m having got*.
### 1.3 Perfect and past forms
- Present perfect of *have* (meaning take/experience): have had / has had; negatives: haven’t had / hasn’t had.
- Past perfect: had had; negative: hadn’t had.
Examples:
- I have had breakfast already.
- She hadn’t had time to reply.
### 1.4 Fixed expressions: HAVE + determiner + noun
Use *have* to describe performing an activity with a noun: to swim -> have a swim; to ride -> have a ride; to smoke -> have a smoke; to rest -> have a rest; to walk -> have a walk.
Examples:
- Let’s have a walk before dinner.
- He had a smoke outside.
Fun fact: In many dialects, especially informal speech, "have a" + noun collocates strongly (have a look, have a go), and swapping it for other verbs often changes formality and nuance.
## 2. DO: dummy operator vs lexical verb
### 2.1 DO as the neutral operator (dummy operator)
- Purpose: forms negatives, questions, emphatic forms and is required where the main verb is in simple present or simple past (except with some auxiliaries and modal verbs).
Forms:
| Function | Positive (uncontracted) | Contracted | Negative |
|---|---:|---:|---:|
| Present | do / does | — | do not / doesn’t |
| Past | did | — | did not / didn’t |
When DO is required (operator cases):
1. Negation with simple present, simple past, or imperative: Don’t wait! He doesn’t like it. She didn’t stop.
2. Questions with simple present or simple past: Does he live in London? Did he enjoy it?
3. Tag questions & substitute clauses with simple present or past: He wants to study, doesn’t he?
4. Emphatic/persuasive constructions: Do come in! He did see them.
5. Inversion after negative adverbs or certain introductory words in simple tenses: Never did he believe she would apologize.
Examples:
- Don’t wait here. (imperative negative)
- Does she work here? (present simple question)
- He wanted to help, didn’t he? (tag question)
### 2.2 DO as a lexical verb (perform)
- Meaning: carry out, execute, work at, be engaged in. It has