Are you free?

Understand the Problem

The question is a casual inquiry about availability, typically not related to a specific subject or academic concern.

Answer

'Are you free?' is correct; 'Do you free?' is incorrect.

The correct phrase is 'Are you free?'. It is a complete sentence used to inquire if someone has available time. 'Do you free' is not grammatically correct as a standalone sentence.

Answer for screen readers

The correct phrase is 'Are you free?'. It is a complete sentence used to inquire if someone has available time. 'Do you free' is not grammatically correct as a standalone sentence.

More Information

'Are you free?' is used commonly in conversational English to ask if someone is available for a discussion, meeting, or to do a favor. It is present tense and straightforward in meaning.

Tips

A common mistake is using 'do you free' due to misunderstanding of verb tenses; remember that 'free' in this context is an adjective, not a verb.

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