Talk:make do

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Latest comment: 8 years ago by TheDaveRoss
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I wonder whether 'make do' could be an ancient eggcorn for 'make due', which I found on page 375 of Programming Python by Mark Lutz, 2nd Edition, 2001 (→ISBN). I get about 337,000 Google hits for 'make due', and only 298,000 for 'make do'. The first 'make due' hit asserts that it's an error and 'make do' is correct, but as we say, citation needed.

As an eggcorn, 'make due' makes perfect sense: to make due is to make at least whatever payment is due; i.e., to get by. In contrast, 'make do' makes no sense I can think of.

76.28.193.251 04:36, 1 December 2007 (UTC)Reply

It makes more sense to me the other way around, if you think of do in the sense of suffice. - TheDaveRoss 19:13, 9 December 2015 (UTC)Reply