Make vs. Do – English Grammar Exercises for B1

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Exercises:   123456789101112

Choose the best option (A, B, C, or D) to complete each sentence. Read the text carefully, as all questions are part of an economic blog post summarizing a startup’s massive success.

Blog Post: How TechNova Defied the Odds This Year

 This year, the global market was terrible, yet a small startup named TechNova still managed to ______ a massive profit.

     (a) do

     (b) making

     (c) make

     (d) produce

 Most analysts agreed that it was incredibly difficult to ______ business under such strict economic conditions.

     (a) do

     (b) make

     (c) doing

     (d) deal

 However, the founders of TechNova clearly understand how to ______ money even in a financial crisis.

     (a) do

     (b) make

     (c) to make

     (d) collect

 In their first press conference, the CEO promised the investors that the company would ______ well despite the challenges.

     (a) make

     (b) doing

     (c) perform

     (d) do

5   Looking at their year-end financial report, it is obvious that the entire team ______ an outstanding job.

     (a) made

     (b) done

     (c) did

     (d) completed

 Early in the year, the board of directors had to ______ a risky decision regarding their main product line.

     (a) make

     (b) do

     (c) making

     (d) take

7   Before launching the new software, the marketing team ______ extensive research on consumer behavior.

     (a) made

     (b) did

     (c) doing

     (d) ran

8   Based on that solid data, they successfully ______ a strategic plan that perfectly targeted young professionals.

     (a) did

     (b) to make

     (c) wrote

     (d) made

9   They were very careful and didn’t ______ any costly mistakes during the expensive      production phase.

     (a) make

     (b) do

     (c) making

     (d) have

10   In fact, the management ______ a huge effort to cut down on unnecessary office expenses.

     (a) did

     (b) make

     (c) made

     (d) put

11   By the second quarter, everyone could see that TechNova was ______ incredible progress.

     (a) doing

     (b) making

     (c) made

     (d) building

12   Their competitors were completely shocked and couldn’t ______ anything to stop TechNova’s rapid growth.

     (a) make

     (b) doing

     (c) act

     (d) do

13   High inflation rates destroyed many businesses, but they didn’t ______ any harm to TechNova’s steady sales.

     (a) do

     (b) make

     (c) did

     (d) bring

14   The startup survived because they had ______ smart arrangements with their international suppliers months in advance.

     (a) did

     (b) making

     (c) made

     (d) organized

15   While most small companies just ______ their best to survive the winter, TechNova was thriving.

     (a) make

     (b) do

     (c) doing

     (d) try

16   Their innovative subscription model ______ a significant difference to their monthly revenue stream.

     (a) did

     (b) make

     (c) created

     (d) made

17   Moving forward, we must ______ sure that we learn valuable lessons from their flexible corporate strategy.

     (a) make

     (b) do

     (c) makes

     (d) keep

18   Even the strictest banks ______ an exception for TechNova and offered them low-interest expansion loans.

     (a) did

     (b) making

     (c) made

     (d) allowed

19   By the end of December, the founders hadn’t just survived; they had officially ______ a fortune!

     (a) made

     (b) did

     (c) done

     (d) won

20   If they keep this up, their revolutionary software will undoubtedly ______ wonders for the tech industry next year.

     (a) make

     (b) do

     (c) to do

     (d) bring

ANSWER KEY & EXPLANATIONS

1  (c) make

  • Why it is correct: “Make a profit” is the standard financial collocation. Profit is a positive result or surplus value that is generated or created.
  • Distractor Analysis: (a) “do” is a Common Mistake. (b) “making” is a Structural Error (requires the bare infinitive after “managed to”). (d) “produce” is a Meaning Trap (logical, but “make a profit” is the absolute fixed idiom).

2  (a) do

  • Why it is correct: “Do business” refers to the ongoing activity, operation, or execution of professional trade.
  • Distractor Analysis: (b) “make” is a Common Mistake. (c) “doing” is a Structural Error. (d) “deal” is a Meaning Trap.

3  (b) make

  • Why it is correct: “Make money” means to generate wealth or earn an income. You are producing a financial result.
  • Distractor Analysis: (a) “do” is a Common Mistake. (c) “to make” is a Structural Error (the “to” is already before the gap: “how to ___”). (d) “collect” is a Meaning Trap.

4  (d) do

  • Why it is correct: “Do well” refers to performing successfully in an activity or business.
  • Distractor Analysis: (a) “make” is a Common Mistake. (b) “doing” is a Structural Error after the modal “would”. (c) “perform” is a Meaning Trap.

5  (c) did

  • Why it is correct: “Do a job” refers to executing a task, role, or professional duty.
  • Distractor Analysis: (a) “made” is a Common Mistake. (b) “done” is a Structural Error (requires Past Simple here, not the past participle). (d) “completed” is a Meaning Trap.

6  (a) make

  • Why it is correct: “Make a decision” refers to the mental creation of a choice or business strategy.
  • Distractor Analysis: (b) “do” is a Common Mistake. (c) “making” is a Structural Error after “had to”. (d) “take” is a Meaning Trap (used in some languages, but unnatural in English here).

7  (b) did

  • Why it is correct: “Do research” refers to the active process of studying and gathering data.
  • Distractor Analysis: (a) “made” is a Common Mistake. (c) “doing” is a Structural Error. (d) “ran” is a Meaning Trap.

8  (d) made

  • Why it is correct: “Make a plan” means to produce, formulate, or draft a new strategy.
  • Distractor Analysis: (a) “did” is a Common Mistake. (b) “to make” is a Structural Error. (c) “wrote” is a Meaning Trap (you can write a document, but you make a plan).

9  (a) make

  • Why it is correct: “Make a mistake” refers to producing an error or financial miscalculation.
  • Distractor Analysis: (b) “do” is a Common Mistake. (c) “making” is a Structural Error after “didn’t”. (d) “have” is a Meaning Trap.

10  (c) made

  • Why it is correct: “Make an effort” means actively generating the energy to accomplish a goal.
  • Distractor Analysis: (a) “did” is a Common Mistake. (b) “make” is a Structural Error (requires Past Simple “made” for a completed action). (d) “put” is a Meaning Trap (you “put effort into”, not “put an effort”).

11  (b) making

  • Why it is correct: “Make progress” is the collocation for moving forward, improving, or creating advancement.
  • Distractor Analysis: (a) “doing” is a Common Mistake. (c) “made” is a Structural Error (requires Present Participle “making” for Past Continuous). (d) “building” is a Meaning Trap.

12  (d) do

  • Why it is correct: “Do anything” is used for general, non-specific actions.
  • Distractor Analysis: (a) “make” is a Common Mistake. (b) “doing” is a Structural Error. (c) “act” is a Meaning Trap.

13  (a) do

  • Why it is correct: “Do harm” is the standard collocation for causing negative impacts or damage.
  • Distractor Analysis: (b) “make” is a Common Mistake. (c) “did” is a Structural Error after the auxiliary “didn’t”. (d) “bring” is a Meaning Trap.

14  (c) made

  • Why it is correct: “Make arrangements” means to produce preparations or organize business deals.
  • Distractor Analysis: (a) “did” is a Common Mistake. (b) “making” is a Structural Error. (d) “organized” is a Meaning Trap (“organized arrangements” is redundant).

15  (b) do

  • Why it is correct: “Do your best” means to perform an action with maximum effort.
  • Distractor Analysis: (a) “make” is a Common Mistake. (c) “doing” is a Structural Error. (d) “try” is a Meaning Trap (you “try your best”, but here “do” strictly contrasts with “make” in the grammar point).

16  (d) made

  • Why it is correct: “Make a difference” means to create a significant change or impact on a situation.
  • Distractor Analysis: (a) “did” is a Common Mistake. (b) “make” is a Structural Error (needs Past Simple). (c) “created” is a Meaning Trap (logical, but not the fixed idiom).

17  (a) make

  • Why it is correct: “Make sure” is a fixed phrase meaning to confirm or guarantee something.
  • Distractor Analysis: (b) “do” is a Common Mistake. (c) “makes” is a Structural Error after the modal “must”. (d) “keep” is a Meaning Trap.

18  (c) made

  • Why it is correct: “Make an exception” means to actively create a special rule that bypasses standard policy.
  • Distractor Analysis: (a) “did” is a Common Mistake. (b) “making” is a Structural Error. (d) “allowed” is a Meaning Trap.

19  (a) made

  • Why it is correct: “Make a fortune” is an idiom meaning to acquire or generate a very large amount of wealth.
  • Distractor Analysis: (b) “did” is a Common Mistake. (c) “done” is a Structural Error (wrong verb entirely). (d) “won” is a Meaning Trap (you win the lottery, but you make a fortune in business).

20  (b) do

  • Why it is correct: “Do wonders” is an idiom meaning to have a highly beneficial effect.
  • Distractor Analysis: (a) “make” is a Common Mistake. (c) “to do” is a Structural Error after the modal “will”. (d) “bring” is a Meaning Trap.
GRAMMAR POINTS TO REMEMBER

1 “MAKE” focuses on CREATION & FINANCIAL RESULTS:

In the business world, when you generate something that wasn’t there before—especially money, plans, and growth—you make it. Money and profit are the “fruits” of your labor.

  • Core Rule: Use “Make” when you construct, produce a result, or generate wealth.
  • Business Examples: make a profit, make money, make a fortune, make progress, make a plan, make a decision, make an effort, make a difference.

2 “DO” focuses on OPERATIONS, TASKS & IMPACTS:

You use “do” when talking about the daily operations of a company, the execution of strategies, or the impact an event has on the market.

  • Core Rule: Use “Do” for executing tasks, ongoing activities, general actions, and the positive/negative impacts of an action.
  • Business Examples: do business (daily operations), do well (performance), do research (task), do a job (task), do harm (negative impact), do wonders (positive impact).

The Startup Golden Rule: First, you DO the research and DO your best. Only then can you MAKE a plan, MAKE a difference, and finally… MAKE a massive profit!

Exercises:   123456789101112

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