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Modals - English Grammar: Can Can Can Can Can Can

The document discusses different English modal verbs and their uses: 1) Can is used to express ability or permission in the present. 2) Could expresses ability or permission in the past or makes polite requests. 3) May expresses possibility or permission in the present. 4) Might expresses less possible possibility or hesitant offers. 5) Must expresses force, necessity, or certainty. 6) Must not and may not express prohibition. 7) Need not means something is not necessary. 8) Ought to expresses advice or obligation. 9) Shall is used instead of will in first person suggestions. 10) Should expresses advice or obligation.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
46 views3 pages

Modals - English Grammar: Can Can Can Can Can Can

The document discusses different English modal verbs and their uses: 1) Can is used to express ability or permission in the present. 2) Could expresses ability or permission in the past or makes polite requests. 3) May expresses possibility or permission in the present. 4) Might expresses less possible possibility or hesitant offers. 5) Must expresses force, necessity, or certainty. 6) Must not and may not express prohibition. 7) Need not means something is not necessary. 8) Ought to expresses advice or obligation. 9) Shall is used instead of will in first person suggestions. 10) Should expresses advice or obligation.
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Modals - English Grammar

1) can
Use ability to do sth. in the present (substitute form: to be able to) permission to do sth. in the present (substitute form: to be allowed to) Request Offer Suggestion Possibility Examples I can speak English. Can I go to the cinema? Can you wait a moment, please? I can lend you my car till tomorrow. Can we visit Grandma at the weekend? It can get very hot in Arizona.

2) could
Use Examples

ability to do sth. in the past (substitute form: to I could speak English. be able to) permission to do sth. in the past (substitute form: to be allowed to) polite question * polite request * polite offer * polite suggestion * possibility * I could go to the cinema. Could I go to the cinema, please? Could you wait a moment, please? I could lend you my car till tomorrow. Could we visit Grandma at the weekend? It could get very hot in Montana.

3) may
Use Possibility permission to do sth. in the present (substitute form: to be allowed to) polite suggestion Examples It may rain today. May I go to the cinema? May I help you?

4) might
Use possibility (less possible than may) * hesitant offer * Examples It might rain today. Might I help you?

5) must
Use force, necessity Possibility advice, recommendation Examples I must go to the supermarket today. You must be tired. You must see the new film with Brad Pitt.

6) must not/may not


Use Prohibition Examples You mustn't work on dad's computer. You may not work on dad's computer.

7) need not
Use not necessary Examples I needn't go to the supermarket, we're going to the restaurant tonight.

8) ought to
Use Advice Obligation Examples You ought to drive carefully in bad weather. You ought to switch off the light when you leave the room.

9) shall
instead of will in the 1st person Use Suggestion Examples Shall I carry your bag?

10) should
Use Advice Obligation Examples You should drive carefully in bad weather. You should switch off the light when you leave the room.

11) will

Use wish, request, demand, order (less polite than would) prediction, assumption Promise spontaneous decisin Habits

Examples Will you please shut the door? I think it will rain on Friday. I will stop smoking. Can somebody drive me to the station? - I will. She's strange, she'll sit for hours without talking.

12) would
Use wish, request (more polite than will) habits in the past Examples Would you shut the door, please? Sometimes he would bring me some flowers.

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