Where do you live or live in?

But to answer your question, Where do you live? is correct grammar. Show activity on this post. If you asked “Where do you live in?”, you would not only be redundant, but you would be ending the question with a preposition, which is grammatically incorrect. So to be correct, you should ask “Where do you live?”

Where do you live answer in English?

We can also use the present continuous to ask this question: “Where are you living?” It’s grammatically correct to answer ”where do you live currently?” with a present simple or a present continuous answer: “I currently live in New York.” “I’m currently living in New York.”

Where do u live meaning?

Where-do-you-live definition. Filters. Used to ask where the person lives.

Do you live in or on a street?

In US English, we say, “I live on this street.” If a person is homeless, we say “He lives on the street” or “He lives on the streets”. Note the subtle difference in wording: “He lives on THE street” means he’s homeless. “He lives on THIS street” or “He lives on Maple Street” tells us his address.

How do you use live in a sentence?

Live sentence example

  • I live with my mother and daughter.
  • You’re trying to live like your parents, Carmen.
  • Whatever occurs, we’ll live with it.
  • Where everyone can live up to his or her maximum potential.
  • Sure, there were other places to live , but nothing would be like the valley where she had spent her childhood.

Where do you live or where do you leave?

where you live vs where do you leave. “Where you live” is missing the helping verb “do.” “Where do you leave” is incorrect because “leave” should be “live.”

Why do you live?

We live because of the happy things. We live because there are people who love us, and people we love back. We live because we want to find out things, and learn, and become able to do things that we would like to do. We live because others want us to, and we want them to live along with us.

Where do we use in and at?

“At” vs. “In” for Location

  • “At” is used when you are at the top, bottom or end of something; at a specific address; at a general location; and at a point.
  • “In” is used in a space, small vehicle, water, neighborhood, city and country.

What do you live in meaning?

Answer: “I live in Brighton.”, “I live in Washington.” or “I live in England.” [Place in this context is usually taken to mean a country, town or village.] “What do you live in?” cannot mean the same as “Where do you live”, because “what” asks for specific information about something.

Do you use in or at for places?

Deciding which word you should be using comes down to a question of where. “At” is used when you are at the top, bottom or end of something; at a specific address; at a general location; and at a point. “In” is used in a space, small vehicle, water, neighborhood, city and country.

Is it on my street or in my street?

“In the street” indicates that he is playing within the boundaries of the road, where the cars drive. “On the street” refers to the area alongside the road. If Fourth Street is the name of the avenue, then the proper phrasing would be “They live on Fourth Street” (without “the).