US Trends

is this sentence formed what did you do? can you tell me it?

The sentence “is this sentence formed what did you do? can you tell me it?” is not grammatically correct in standard English.

What’s wrong with it

  • The word order is unnatural and confusing for a question.
  • The pronoun “it” at the end (“tell me it”) is not used this way in English.

Natural ways to say it

If the intention is to ask whether a sentence is correct and what someone did, more natural versions are:

  • “Is this sentence correct: ‘What did you do? Can you tell me?’”
  • “What did you do? Can you tell me?”

If you want the person to explain their action:

  • “What did you do? Can you tell me about it?”

Quick grammar notes

  • For questions in the past, the structure is: question word + did + subject + base verb → “What did you do?”
  • “Tell me it” is incorrect; use “tell me about it” or “tell it to me” depending on context.

If you share the exact meaning you want (for example: checking a sentence, asking about someone’s past action, etc.), a more precise and polished version can be suggested.