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Accueil English Grammar Unit 51 — Auxiliary Verbs
Unit 51 · Grammar Lesson
Unité 51 · Leçon de Grammaire

Auxiliary Verbs
have / do / can etc. & I think so / I hope so — Complete Guide
Verbes Auxiliaires
have / do / can etc. & I think so / I hope so — Guide Complet

Master auxiliary verbs to avoid repetition, express agreement with so / neither, show surprise with echo questions, and use short answers like I think so / I hope not

Maîtrisez les verbes auxiliaires pour éviter les répétitions, exprimer l’accord avec so / neither, montrer la surprise et utiliser des réponses courtes comme I think so / I hope not

B1 – B2 4 Rules · 4 Exercises · 200-Q Quiz · PDF 4 Règles · 4 Exercices · Quiz 200 Q · PDF 🇬🇧 EN / 🇫🇷 FR

Auxiliary verbs (have, do, can, will, is, was, etc.) are helping verbs that work alongside main verbs. We use them constantly to avoid repeating main verbs, to agree or disagree, to show surprise, and to give short answers. This unit covers all four key uses clearly with bilingual examples.

Les verbes auxiliaires (have, do, can, will, is, was, etc.) sont des verbes d’aide qui accompagnent les verbes principaux. On les utilise constamment pour éviter de répéter les verbes, pour exprimer accord ou désaccord, montrer la surprise et donner des réponses courtes. Cette unité couvre les quatre usages principaux avec des exemples bilingues.

A

Auxiliary Verbs — Avoiding Repetition

Verbes Auxiliaires — Éviter la répétition

Every English sentence has an auxiliary verb and a main verb. We can use the auxiliary alone to avoid repeating the main verb:

Chaque phrase anglaise a un verbe auxiliaire et un verbe principal. On peut utiliser l’auxiliaire seul pour éviter de répéter le verbe principal :

SubjectAuxiliaryMain verb SubjectAuxiliaryMain verb
Ihavelost The hotelwasbuilt
Shecan’tcome Whydo youwant
Use the auxiliary alone (don’t repeat the main verb)
‘Have you locked the door?’ ‘Yes, I have.’ (= I have locked the door)
Gary wasn’t working, but Laura was. (= Laura was working)
Jessica could lend me the money, but she won’t. (= she won’t lend me the money)

Use do / does / did for the present and past simple:

Utilisez do / does / did au présent simple et au passé simple :

‘Do you like onions?’ ‘Yes, I do.’ (= I like onions)
‘Does Simon live in London?’ ‘He did, but he doesn’t any more.’

You can also use auxiliaries to deny what someone says:

On peut aussi utiliser les auxiliaires pour contredire ce que quelqu’un dit :

‘You’re sitting in my place.’ ‘No, I’m not.’
→ denying the claim using the auxiliary
→ contredire l’affirmation avec l’auxiliaire
‘You didn’t lock the door before you left.’ ‘Yes, I did.’
→ affirming with the past auxiliary
→ affirmer avec l’auxiliaire passé

B

Echo Questions — Showing Interest or Surprise

Questions Écho — Montrer l’intérêt ou la surprise

We use have you? / isn’t she? / are they? etc. (= short question using the auxiliary) to show that we are interested in what someone said, or to show surprise.

On utilise have you? / isn’t she? / are they? etc. pour montrer qu’on est intéressé par ce que quelqu’un a dit, ou pour exprimer la surprise.

‘I’ve just seen Steven.’ ‘Oh, have you? How is he?’
→ positive statement → positive echo question
→ affirmation positive → question écho positive
‘Lisa isn’t very well today.’ ‘Isn’t she? What’s wrong with her?’
→ negative statement → negative echo question
→ affirmation négative → question écho négative
‘It rained every day during our holiday.’ ‘Did it? What a shame!’
→ past simple statement → did + subject
→ affirmation au passé → did + sujet
‘James and Tanya are getting married.’ ‘Are they? Really?’
→ present continuous → are + subject
→ présent continu → are + sujet
📌
Echo question = same auxiliary as in the original sentence. Question écho = même auxiliaire que dans la phrase d’origine. If the statement is positive, the echo question is also positive. If negative, the echo question is also negative. This is different from tag questions, where the tag is always the opposite. Si l’affirmation est positive, la question écho est aussi positive. Si elle est négative, la question écho est aussi négative. C’est différent des question tags, où le tag est toujours l’opposé.

C

So … / Neither … — Agreeing with Others

So … / Neither … — Exprimer l’accord

Use So + auxiliary + subject to agree with a positive statement. Use Neither + auxiliary + subject to agree with a negative statement.

Utilisez So + auxiliaire + sujet pour marquer l’accord avec une affirmation positive. Utilisez Neither + auxiliaire + sujet pour marquer l’accord avec une affirmation négative.

So … (positive agreement)

So … (accord positif)

= me too / I do too
= moi aussi
‘I’m tired.’ ‘So am I.
I passed the exam and so did Paul.
‘She can swim.’ ‘So can I.
‘We enjoyed it.’ ‘So did we.

Neither … (negative agreement)

Neither … (accord négatif)

= me neither / I don’t either
= moi non plus
‘I never read newspapers.’ ‘Neither do I.
Sarah can’t drive and neither can Mark.
‘I didn’t enjoy it.’ ‘Neither did I.
‘She won’t be there.’ ‘Neither will he.
💡
Word order: verb before subject. Ordre des mots : verbe avant le sujet. I passed the exam and so did Paul. ✓   NOT so Paul did. ✗   Instead of neither, you can use nor, or not … either: ‘I don’t know.’ → Neither do I. / Nor do I. / I don’t either. I passed the exam and so did Paul. ✓   PAS so Paul did. ✗   À la place de neither, on peut utiliser nor ou not … either.

D

I think so / I hope so / I’m afraid so etc.

I think so / I hope so / I’m afraid so etc.

Use I think so / I hope so etc. when you don’t want to repeat a whole clause. So replaces the repeated content.

Utilisez I think so / I hope so etc. quand on ne veut pas répéter toute une proposition. So remplace le contenu répété.

‘Are those people Korean?’ ‘I think so. (= I think they are Korean)
‘Is Kate working tomorrow?’ ‘I suppose so. (= I suppose she is working tomorrow)
‘Will you be at home this evening?’ ‘I expect so. (= I expect I’ll be at home…)

The negative forms vary — learn each one:

Les formes négatives varient — apprenez-les :

PositiveNegative
I think soI don’t think so
I expect soI don’t expect so
I hope soI hope not
I’m afraid soI’m afraid not
I suppose soI suppose not
I guess soI guess not
⚠️
Watch out:Attention : We say I hope not (NOT I don’t hope so). The negative of hope so and I’m afraid so is formed with not after the verb, not with don’t. On dit I hope not (PAS I don’t hope so). Le négatif de hope so et I’m afraid so se forme avec not après le verbe, pas avec don’t.

Auxiliary Verbs — Exercises with AnswersVerbes Auxiliaires — Exercices avec Corrigé

Put each rule into practice — check your answers instantly

Mettez chaque règle en pratique — vérifiez vos réponses instantanément

EX 1

Exercise 1 — Complete with an auxiliary verb (sometimes negative)

Exercice 1 — Complétez avec un auxiliaire (parfois négatif)

Use: do / was / could / might / will / would etc. Sometimes negative.

Utilisez : do / was / could / might / will / would etc. Parfois négatif.

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Answers:Réponses : 1. were  ·  2. doesn’t  ·  3. was  ·  4. has  ·  5. will  ·  6. should  ·  7. won’t  ·  8. do  ·  9. didn’t  ·  10. might / could
EX 2

Exercise 2 — Disagree with each statement (echo + denial)

Exercice 2 — Contredisez chaque affirmation

Write the echo question AND your denial. Example: ‘I’m hungry.’ → Are you? I’m not.

Écrivez la question écho ET votre contradiction. Exemple : ‘I’m hungry.’ → Are you? I’m not.

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Answers:Réponses : 1. Are you? I’m not.  ·  2. Don’t you? I do.  ·  3. Do you? I don’t.  ·  4. Didn’t you? I did.  ·  5. Aren’t you? I am.  ·  6. Did you? I didn’t.
EX 3

Exercise 3 — Agree using So … or Neither …

Exercice 3 — Exprimez l’accord avec So … ou Neither …

If the same is true for you, agree using So … or Neither …

Si c’est aussi vrai pour vous, marquez l’accord avec So … ou Neither …

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Answers:Réponses : 1. Neither am I.  ·  2. So did I.  ·  3. Neither will I.  ·  4. So do I.  ·  5. So would I.  ·  6. Neither can I.  ·  7. So am I.
🎯

Exercise 4 — Use I think so / I hope not etc.

Exercice 4 — Utilisez I think so / I hope not etc.

Write the correct short answer using the verb in brackets.

Écrivez la bonne réponse courte avec le verbe entre parenthèses.

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Answers:Réponses : 1. I hope not  ·  2. I hope so  ·  3. I hope not  ·  4. I don’t think so  ·  5. I suppose so  ·  6. I’m afraid so  ·  7. I think so  ·  8. I’m afraid not

Frequently Asked Questions — Auxiliary Verbs

Questions fréquentes — Verbes Auxiliaires

Do/does/did are the auxiliaries for the present simple and past simple. For all other tenses and modals, use the appropriate auxiliary: have/has/had (perfect tenses), will/would/can/could/should/might/must (modals), am/is/are/was/were (continuous and passive).

Do/does/did sont les auxiliaires du présent simple et du passé simple. Pour tous les autres temps et les modaux, utilisez l’auxiliaire approprié.

An echo question mirrors the polarity of the statement: positive statement → positive echo (‘I’ve seen Steven.’ ‘Have you?’). A tag question is the opposite polarity: positive statement → negative tag (‘You’ve seen Steven, haven’t you?’). Echo questions show surprise or interest; tag questions seek confirmation.

Une question écho reprend la polarité de l’affirmation. Un question tag a une polarité opposée.

Yes! Neither do I, Nor do I, and I don’t either all mean the same thing — they express negative agreement. Neither and nor are slightly more formal; I don’t either is more common in casual speech.

Oui ! Neither do I, Nor do I et I don’t either ont tous le même sens — ils expriment un accord négatif.

With hope and I’m afraid, the negative is formed differently. We say I hope not (not I don’t hope so) and I’m afraid not. With think and expect, however: I don’t think so is standard. Learning the table in Rule D is the best approach.

Avec hope et I’m afraid, le négatif se forme différemment : I hope not et I’m afraid not.

The auxiliary comes before the subject: I passed the exam and so did Paul. NOT so Paul did. This inversion is exactly the same as in questions.

L’auxiliaire vient avant le sujet : so did Paul, pas so Paul did.

🎯 Unit 51 · MCQ QuizUnité 51 · Quiz QCM

Auxiliary Verbs — Quiz

Verbes Auxiliaires — Quiz

200-question bank · 10–40 questions per session · instant feedback · printable PDF

Banque de 200 questions · 10 à 40 questions par session · correction immédiate · PDF

200 Questions 5 Topics B1 · B2 PDF ✓

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All topics Avoiding Repetition Echo Questions So / Neither Think so / Hope so Mixed

Auxiliary Verbs Quiz

Quiz — Verbes Auxiliaires

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