Faire means "to do" in French and is an irregular third-group verb. Common derivatives include refaire, défaire, satisfaire, and contrefaire. Base form is "faire" with participe "fait" in compound tenses
Present simple describes routine actions and habits. Present continuous shows actions happening at the moment. Present perfect indicates actions continuing from past to present. Present perfect continuous describes duration of ongoing actions
"-er" is most common, "-or" is much more common than "-ar". "-er" is used with single consonant verbs, doubling consonants with vowels. "-or" is used with multi-syllable verbs ending in "-it". "-er" is used with verbs ending in silent E. "-or" is used with multi-syllable verbs ending in "-ate"
The meanings of 'doesn't' and 'don't' are identical. 'Don't' is incorrect when used instead of 'doesn't'. Both words are contractions of 'do' and 'not'
Take means to move something or someone from one place to another. Present tense: I take my dog on walks. Simple past: We took my mother for a drive. Past participle: The cat had to be taken to the vet