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7 definitions found
From:
DICT.TW English-Chinese Dictionary 英漢字典
do
/ˈdu/
(
vt
.)做,幹,辦;製作,產生;學習,研究;算出,解答;給與;整理,使整潔;適合
From:
Network Terminology
do
做
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
do
v.
t
. ∨ auxiliary
. [
imp.
did
p. p.
done
p.
pr
. &
vb
. n.
Doing
This
verb
,
when
transitive
,
is
formed
in
the
indicative
,
present
tense
,
thus
:
I
do
,
thou
doest
or
dost
he
does
doeth
or
doth
when
auxiliary
,
the
second
person
is
,
thou
dost
.
As
an
independent
verb
,
dost
is
obsolete
or
rare
,
except
in
poetry
.
“What
dost
thou
in
this
world?”
--
Milton
.
The
form
doeth
is
a
verb
unlimited
,
doth
,
formerly
so
used
,
now
being
the
auxiliary
form
.
The
second
pers
,
sing
.,
imperfect
tense
,
is
didst
formerly
didest
]
1.
To
place
;
to
put
. [
Obs
.]
2.
To
cause
;
to
make
; --
with
an
infinitive
. [
Obs
.]
My
lord
Abbot
of
Westminster
did
do
shewe
to
me
late
certain
evidences
.
--
W
.
Caxton
.
I
shall
. . .
your
cloister
do
make
.
--
Piers
Plowman
.
A
fatal
plague
which
many
did
to
die
.
--
Spenser
.
We
do
you
to
wit
[=\
i
.
e
.
,
We
make
you
to
know
]
of
the
grace
of
God
bestowed
on
the
churches
of
Macedonia
.\= --
2
Cor
.
viii
. 1.
Note:
☞
We
have
lost
the
idiom
shown
by
the
citations
(
do
used
like
the
French
faire
or
laisser
),
in
which
the
verb
in
the
infinitive
apparently
,
but
not
really
,
has
a
passive
signification
,
i
.
e
.
,
cause
. . .
to
be
made
.
3.
To
bring
about
;
to
produce
,
as
an
effect
or
result
;
to
effect
;
to
achieve
.
The
neglecting
it
may
do
much
danger
.
--
Shak
.
He
waved
indifferently
'
twixt
doing
them
neither
good
not
harm
.
--
Shak
.
4.
To
perform
,
as
an
action
;
to
execute
;
to
transact
to
carry
out
in
action
;
as
,
to
do
a
good
or
a
bad
act
;
do
our
duty
;
to
do
what
I
can
.
Six
days
shalt
thou
labor
and
do
all
thy
work
.
--
Ex
.
xx
. 9.
We
did
not
do
these
things
.
--
Ld
.
Lytton
.
You
can
not
do
wrong
without
suffering
wrong
.
--
Emerson
.
Hence
:
To
do
homage
,
honor
,
favor
,
justice
,
etc
.,
to
render
homage
,
honor
,
etc
.
5.
To
bring
to
an
end
by
action
;
to
perform
completely
;
to
finish
;
to
accomplish
; --
a
sense
conveyed
by
the
construction
,
which
is
that
of
the
past
participle
done
.
“Ere
summer
half
be
done
.”
“I
have
done
weeping.”
6.
To
make
ready
for
an
object
,
purpose
,
or
use
,
as
food
by
cooking
;
to
cook
completely
or
sufficiently
;
as
,
the
meat
is
done
on
one
side
only
.
7.
To
put
or
bring
into
a
form
,
state
,
or
condition
,
especially
in
the
phrases
,
to
do
death
,
to
put
to
death
;
to
slay
;
to
do
away
(
often
do
away
with
),
to
put
away
;
to
remove
;
to
do
on
,
to
put
on
;
to
don
;
to
do
off
,
to
take
off
,
as
dress
;
to
doff
;
to
do
into
,
to
put
into
the
form
of
;
to
translate
or
transform
into
,
as
a
text
.
Done to death
by
slanderous
tongues
.
--
Shak
.
The
ground
of
the
difficulty
is
done away
.
--
Paley
.
Suspicions
regarding
his
loyalty
were
entirely
done away
.
--
Thackeray
.
To
do on
our
own
harness
,
that
we
may
not
;
but
we
must
do on
the
armor
of
God
.
--
Latimer
.
Then
Jason
rose
and
did on
him
a
fair
Blue
woolen
tunic
. --
W
.
Morris
(Jason).
Though
the
former
legal
pollution
be
now
done off
,
yet
there
is
a
spiritual
contagion
in
idolatry
as
much
to
be
shunned
.
--
Milton
.
It
[=\“
Pilgrim's
Progress”
]
has
been
done into
verse
:
it
has
been
done into
modern
English
.\= --
Macaulay
.
8.
To
cheat
;
to
gull
;
to
overreach
. [
Colloq
.]
He
was
not
be
done
,
at
his
time
of
life
,
by
frivolous
offers
of
a
compromise
that
might
have
secured
him
seventy-five
per
cent
.
--
De
Quincey
.
9.
To
see
or
inspect
;
to
explore
;
as
,
to
do
all
the
points
of
interest
. [
Colloq
.]
10.
Stock Exchange
To
cash
or
to
advance
money
for
,
as
a
bill
or
note
.
11.
To
perform
work
upon
,
about
,
for
,
or
at
,
by
way
of
caring
for
,
looking
after
,
preparing
,
cleaning
,
keeping
in
order
,
or
the
like
.
The
sergeants
seem
to
do
themselves
pretty
well
.
--
Harper's
Mag
.
12.
To
deal
with
for
good
and
all
;
to
finish
up
;
to
undo
;
to
ruin
;
to
do
for
. [
Colloq
.
or
Slang
]
Sometimes
they
lie
in
wait
in
these
dark
streets
,
and
fracture
his
skull
, . . .
or
break
his
arm
,
or
cut
the
sinew
of
his
wrist
;
and
that
they
call
doing
him
.
--
Charles
Reade
.
Note:
☞
(a)
Do
and
did
are
much
employed
as
auxiliaries
,
the
verb
to
which
they
are
joined
being
an
infinitive
.
As
an
auxiliary
the
verb
do
has
no
participle
.
“I
do
set
my
bow
in
the
cloud.”
--
Gen
.
ix
. 13.
[
Now
archaic
or
rare
except
for
emphatic
assertion
.]
Rarely
. . .
did
the
wrongs
of
individuals
to
the
knowledge
of
the
public
.
--
Macaulay
.
(b)
They
are
often
used
in
emphatic
construction
.
“You
don't
say
so
,
Mr
.
Jobson
. --
but
I
do
say
so.”
--
Sir
W
.
Scott
.
“I
did
love
him
,
but
scorn
him
now
.”
--
Latham
.
(c)
In
negative
and
interrogative
constructions
,
do
and
did
are
in
common
use
.
I
do
not
wish
to
see
them
;
what
do
you
think
?
Did
Cæsar
cross
the
Tiber
?
He
did
not
.
“
Do
you
love
me?”
--
Shak
.
(d)
Do
,
as
an
auxiliary
,
is
supposed
to
have
been
first
used
before
imperatives
.
It
expresses
entreaty
or
earnest
request
;
as
,
do
help
me
.
In
the
imperative
mood
,
but
not
in
the
indicative
,
it
may
be
used
with
the
verb
to
be
;
as
,
do
be
quiet
.
Do
,
did
,
and
done
often
stand
as
a
general
substitute
or
representative
verb
,
and
thus
save
the
repetition
of
the
principal
verb
.
“To
live
and
die
is
all
we
have
to
do
.”
--
Denham
.
In
the
case
of
do
and
did
as
auxiliaries
,
the
sense
may
be
completed
by
the
infinitive
(
without
to
)
of
the
verb
represented
.
“When
beauty
lived
and
died
as
flowers
do
now.”
--
Shak
.
“I . . .
chose
my
wife
as
she
did
her
wedding
gown.”
My
brightest
hopes
giving
dark
fears
a
being
.
As
the
light
does
the
shadow
. --
Longfellow
.
In
unemphatic
affirmative
sentences
do
is
,
for
the
most
part
,
archaic
or
poetical
;
as
,
“This
just
reproach
their
virtue
does
excite.”
To do one's best
,
To do one's diligence
(
and
the
like
),
to
exert
one's
self
;
to
put
forth
one's
best
or
most
or
most
diligent
efforts
.
“We
will
. . .
do
our
best
to
gain
their
assent.”
--
Jowett
(Thucyd.).
To do one's business
,
to
ruin
one
. [
Colloq
.] --
Wycherley
.
To do one shame
,
to
cause
one
shame
. [
Obs
.]
To do over
.
(a)
To
make
over
;
to
perform
a
second
time
.
(b)
To
cover
;
to
spread
;
to
smear
.
“Boats . . .
sewed
together
and
done
over
with
a
kind
of
slimy
stuff
like
rosin.”
--
De
Foe
.
To do to death
,
to
put
to
death
. (
See
7.) [
Obs
.]
To do up
.
(a)
To
put
up
;
to
raise
. [
Obs
.] --
Chaucer
.
(b)
To
pack
together
and
envelop
;
to
pack
up
.
(c)
To
accomplish
thoroughly
. [
Colloq
.]
(d)
To
starch
and
iron
.
“A
rich
gown
of
velvet
,
and
a
ruff
done
up
with
the
famous
yellow
starch.”
--
Hawthorne
.
To do way
,
to
put
away
;
to
lay
aside
. [
Obs
.] --
Chaucer
.
To do with
,
to
dispose
of
;
to
make
use
of
;
to
employ
; --
usually
preceded
by
what
.
“Men
are
many
times
brought
to
that
extremity
,
that
were
it
not
for
God
they
would
not
know
what
to
do
with
themselves.”
--
Tillotson
.
To have to do with
,
to
have
concern
,
business
or
intercourse
with
;
to
deal
with
.
When
preceded
by
what
,
the
notion
is
usually
implied
that
the
affair
does
not
concern
the
person
denoted
by
the
subject
of
have
.
“Philology
has
to
do
with
language
in
its
fullest
sense.”
--
Earle
.
“What
have
I
to
do
with
you
,
ye
sons
of
Zeruiah?”
--
2
Sam
.
xvi
. 10.
◄
►
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Do
n.
Mus.
A
syllable
attached
to
the
first
tone
of
the
major
diatonic
scale
for
the
purpose
of
solmization
,
or
solfeggio
.
It
is
the
first
of
the
seven
syllables
used
by
the
Italians
as
manes
of
musical
tones
,
and
replaced
,
for
the
sake
of
euphony
,
the
syllable
Ut
,
applied
to
the
note
C
.
In
England
and
America
the
same
syllables
are
used
by
many
as
a
scale
pattern
,
while
the
tones
in
respect
to
absolute
pitch
are
named
from
the
first
seven
letters
of
the
alphabet
.
◄
►
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Do
v. i.
1.
To
act
or
behave
in
any
manner
;
to
conduct
one's
self
.
They
fear
not
the
Lord
,
neither
do
they
after
. . .
the
law
and
commandment
.
--
2
Kings
xvii
. 34.
2.
To
fare
;
to
be
,
as
regards
health
;
as
,
they
asked
him
how
he
did
;
how
do
you
do
to-day
?
3.
To
succeed
;
to
avail
;
to
answer
the
purpose
;
to
serve
;
as
,
if
no
better
plan
can
be
found
,
he
will
make
this
do
.
You
would
do
well
to
prefer
a
bill
against
all
kings
and
parliaments
since
the
Conquest
;
and
if
that
won't
do
;
challenge
the
crown
.
--
Collier
.
To do by
.
See
under
By
.
To do for
.
(a)
To
answer
for
;
to
serve
as
;
to
suit
.
(b)
To
put
an
end
to
;
to
ruin
;
to
baffle
completely
;
as
,
a
goblet
is
done
for
when
it
is
broken
. [
Colloq
.]
Some
folks
are
happy
and
easy
in
mind
when
their
victim
is
stabbed
and
done for
.
--
Thackeray
.
--
To do withal
,
to
help
or
prevent
it
. [
Obs
.]
“I
could
not
do
withal
.”
--
Shak
.
To do without
,
to
get
along
without
;
to
dispense
with
.
To have done
,
to
have
made
an
end
or
conclusion
;
to
have
finished
;
to
be
quit
;
to
desist
.
To have done with
,
to
have
completed
;
to
be
through
with
;
to
have
no
further
concern
with
.
Well to do
,
in
easy
circumstances
.
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Do
,
n.
1.
Deed
;
act
;
fear
. [
Obs
.]
2.
Ado
;
bustle
;
stir
;
to
do
. [
R
.]
A
great
deal
of
do
,
and
a
great
deal
of
trouble
.
--
Selden
.
3.
A
cheat
;
a
swindle
. [
Slang
,
Eng
.]
◄
►
From:
WordNet (r) 2.0
do
n
1:
an
uproarious
party
[
syn
:
bash
,
brawl
]
2:
the
syllable
naming
the
first
(
tonic
)
note
of
any
major
scale
in
solmization
[
syn
:
doh
,
ut
]
3:
doctor's
degree
in
osteopathy
[
syn
:
Doctor of Osteopathy
]
v
1:
engage
in
; "
make
love
,
not
war
"; "
make
an
effort
"; "
do
research
"; "
do
nothing
"; "
make
revolution
" [
syn
:
make
]
2:
carry
out
or
perform
an
action
; "
John
did
the
painting
,
the
weeding
,
and
he
cleaned
out
the
gutters
"; "
the
skater
executed
a
triple
pirouette
"; "
she
did
a
little
dance
"
[
syn
:
perform
,
execute
]
3:
get
(
something
)
done
; "
I
did
my
job
" [
syn
:
perform
]
4:
proceed
or
get
along
; "
How
is
she
doing
in
her
new
job
?";
"
How
are
you
making
out
in
graduate
school
?"; "
He's
come
a
long
way
" [
syn
:
fare
,
make out
,
come
,
get along
]
5:
give
rise
to
;
cause
to
happen
or
occur
,
not
always
intentionally
; "
cause
a
commotion
"; "
make
a
stir
"; "
cause
an
accident
" [
syn
:
cause
,
make
]
6:
carry
out
or
practice
;
as
of
jobs
and
professions
; "
practice
law
" [
syn
:
practice
,
practise
,
exercise
]
7:
be
sufficient
;
be
adequate
,
either
in
quality
or
quantity
;
"
A
few
words
would
answer
"; "
This
car
suits
my
purpose
well
"; "
Will
$100
do
?"; "
A
'
B
'
grade
doesn't
suffice
to
get
me
into
medical
school
"; "
Nothing
else
will
serve
"
[
syn
:
suffice
,
answer
,
serve
]
8:
create
or
design
,
often
in
a
certain
way
; "
Do
my
room
in
blue
"; "
I
did
this
piece
in
wood
to
express
my
love
for
the
forest
" [
syn
:
make
] [
ant
:
unmake
]
9:
behave
in
a
certain
manner
;
show
a
certain
behavior
;
conduct
or
comport
oneself
; "
You
should
act
like
an
adult
"; "
Don't
behave
like
a
fool
"; "
What
makes
her
do
this
way
?"; "
The
dog
acts
ferocious
,
but
he
is
really
afraid
of
people
"
[
syn
:
act
,
behave
]
10:
spend
time
in
prison
or
in
a
labor
camp
; "
He
did
six
years
for
embezzlement
" [
syn
:
serve
]
11:
carry
on
or
manage
; "
We
could
do
with
a
little
more
help
around
here
" [
syn
:
manage
]
12:
arrange
attractively
; "
dress
my
hair
for
the
wedding
" [
syn
:
dress
,
arrange
,
set
,
coif
,
coiffe
,
coiffure
]
13:
travel
or
traverse
(
a
distance
); "
This
car
does
150
miles
per
hour
"; "
We
did
6
miles
on
our
hike
every
day
"
[
also
:
done
,
did
]
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