Modal Verb1
Modal Verb1
Modal Verb1
Probability:
First, they can be used when we want to say how sure we are that something happened /
is happening / will happen. We often call these 'modals of deduction' or 'speculation' or
'certainty' or 'probability'.
For example:
I don't know where John is. He could have missed the train.
Ability
We use 'can' and 'could' to talk about a skill or ability.
For example:
I can't drive.
For example:
Permission
We can use verbs such as 'can', 'could' and 'may' to ask for and give permission. We also
use modal verbs to say something is not allowed.
For example:
Habits
We can use 'will' and 'would' to talk about habits or things we usually do, or did in the
past.
For example:
When I lived in Italy, we would often eat in the restaurant next to my flat.
Past modals
The past modals 'could have + past participle', 'should have + past participle' and 'would
have + past participle' can be confusing. I explain about them here.
1: Could have + past participle means that something was possible in the past, or
you had the ability to do something in the past, but that you didn't do it. (See
also modals of ability.)
They could have won the race, but they didn't try hard enough.
Julie could have bought the book, but she borrowed it from the library instead.
He could have studied harder, but he was too lazy and that's why he failed the
exam.
Couldn't have + past participle means that something wasn't possible in the past,
even if you had wanted to do it.
I couldn't have arrived any earlier. There was a terrible traffic jam (= it was
impossible for me to have arrived any earlier).
He couldn't have passed the exam, even if he had studied harder. It's a really,
really difficult exam.
2: We use could have + past participle when we want to make a guess about
something that happened in the past. (See also modals of probability.) In this case,
we don't know if what we're saying is true or not true. We're just talking about our
opinion of what maybe happened.
We can also choose to use might have + past participle to mean the same thing:
1: Should have + past participle can mean something that would have been a good
idea, but that you didn't do it. It's like giving advice about the past when you say it to
someone else, or regretting what you did or didn't do when you're talking about yourself.
Shouldn't have + past participle means that something wasn't a good idea, but you
did it anyway.
I should have studied harder! (= I didn't study very hard and so I failed the exam.
I'm sorry about this now.)
I should have gone to bed early (= I didn't go to bed early and now I'm tired).
I shouldn't have eaten so much cake! (= I did eat a lot of cake and now I don't feel
good.)
You should have called me when you arrived (= you didn't call me and I was
worried. I wish that you had called me).
John should have left early, then he wouldn't have missed the plane (= but he
didn't leave early and so he did miss the plane).
2: We can also use should have + past participle to talk about something that, if
everything is normal and okay, we think has already happened. But we're not certain
that everything is fine, so we use 'should have' and not the present perfect or past
simple. It's often used with 'by now'.
His plane should have arrived by now (= if everything is fine, the plane has
arrived).
John should have finished work by now (= if everything is normal, John has
finished work).
We can also use this to talk about something that would have happened if everything
was fine, but hasn't happened.
If I had had enough money, I would have bought a car (but I didn't have enough
money, so I didn't buy a car).
2: Because 'would' (and will) can also be used to show if you want to do something or
not (volition), we can also use would have + past participle to talk about something
you wanted to do but didn't. This is very similar to the third conditional, but we don't
need an 'if clause'.
Modal verbs are special verbs which behave very differently from normal verbs. Here
are some important differences:
2. You use "not" to make modal verbs negative, even in Simple Present and Simple
Past.
Examples:
3. Many modal verbs cannot be used in the past tenses or the future tenses.
Examples:
For the purposes of this tutorial, we have included some expressions which are not
modal verbs including had better, have to, and have got to. These expressions are
closely related to modals in meaning and are often interchanged with them.
Modal verbs
The modal verbs include can, must, may, might, will, would, should. They
are used with other verbs to express ability, obligation, possibility, and so
on. Below is a list showing the most useful modals and their most common
meanings:
Modal verbs are unlike other verbs. They do not change their form (spelling)
and they have no infinitive or participle (past/present). The
modals must and can need substitute verbs to express obligation or ability in
the different tenses. Here are some examples:
Future You'll have to work hard if you want to pass the exams.
Present perfect I haven't been able to solve this problem. Can you help?
The modal verbs are can, could, may, might, shall, should, will and would.
The modals are used to do things like talking about ability, asking permission making
requests, and so on.
Ability:
We use could have to say that someone had the ability/opportunity to do something,
but did notdo it:
She could have learned Swahili, but she didnt have time.
I could have danced all night [but didn't].
Permission:
may is another more formal and polite way of asking for permission:
may is a more formal and polite way of saying that someone has permission:
We use could you and would you as polite ways of telling or asking someone to do
something:
We sometime say I can ... or I could ... or Ill (I will) ... to make an offer:
They never change their form. You can't add "s", "ed", "ing"...
They are always followed by an infinitive without "to" (e.i. the bare infinitive.)
They are used to indicate modality allow speakers to express certainty, possibility,
willingness, obligation, necessity, ability
The verbs or expressions dare, ought to, had better, and need not behave like modal
auxiliaries to a large extent and my be added to the above list
1. Permission
2. Ability
3. Obligation
4. Prohibition
5. Lack of necessity
6. Advice
7. possibility
8. probability
Strong obligation You must stop when the traffic lights turn
red.
must
logical conclusion / Certainty He must be very tired. He's been working all
day long.
Remember
Modal verbs are followed by an infinitive without "to", also called the bare infinitive.
Examples:
There are a lot of tomatoes in the fridge. You need not buy any.
The verbs or expressions dare, ought to, had better, and need not behave like modal
auxiliaries to a large extent and my be added to the above list
2. Ability
3. Obligation
4. Prohibition
5. Lack of necessity
6. Advice
7. possibility
8. probability
Strong obligation You must stop when the traffic lights turn
red.
must
logical conclusion / Certainty He must be very tired. He's been working all
day long.
Remember
Modal verbs are followed by an infinitive without "to", also called the bare infinitive.
Examples:
There are a lot of tomatoes in the fridge. You need not buy any.
Example:
Present:
You should see a doctor.
Past:
You should have seen a doctor
Obligation:
Present = I must / have to work hard. -- Past = I had to work hard.
Ability:
Present = I can run fast. -- Past = I could run fast when I was young.
Lack of necessity:
Present = You don't have to / needn't take your umbrella. -- Past = You didn't have to /
didn't need to take your umbrella.
Obligation You must / have to stop when the traffic You had to stop.
lights are red.
Advice You should see a doctor. You should have seen a doctor
Prohibition You mustn't smoke here. You mustn't have smoked there.
Certainty He has a Rolls Royce. He must be very He must have been rich. He had a
rich. big house and an expensive car.
He can't be American. His English is He can't have written that poem.
terrible. He was illiterate.
Possibility It may / can / could / might rain. It's I guess it may / can / could /
cloudy. might have been Lacy on the
phone.
Lack of You don't have to / needn't buy any You didn't have to / didn't
necessity tomatoes. There are plenty in the fridge. need to buy tomatoes.
Must
1. We use must to make a logical deduction based on evidence. It indicates that the speaker
is certain about something:
Examples:
It has rained all day, it must be very wet outside.
Examples:
I must go to bed.
Have to
Like must, have to is used to express strong obligation, but when we use have to there is
usually a sense of external obligation. Some external circumstance makes the obligation
necessary.
Examples:
I, we shall go
I, we shan't give up
Uses of shall
It should be noted that shall is often used to make suggestions, offers or ask for advice. It is
used in questions as follows:
Shall we dance?
As said above shall is used with first person singular and plural (I and we.) But there is a very
special use of shall with other persons to make a promise, command or threat as noted
below:
MODAL VERBS
OVERVIEW | ACTION VERBS | AUXILIARY VERBS | FINITE / NON-FINITE | IRREGULAR
VERBS
MAIN VERBS | MODAL VERBS | MOOD | PHRASAL VERBS | REGULAR VERBS | STATIVE
VERBS
All the auxiliary verbs except be, do and have are called modals. Unlike other auxiliary verbs modals
only exist in their helping form; they cannot act alone as the main verb in a sentence.
Be, do, and have also differ from the other auxiliaries in that they can also serve as ordinary verbs in
a given sentence.
CAN / COULD / MAY / MIGHT / MUST / OUGHT TO / SHALL / SHOULD / WILL / WOULD
Contextual classes
We'd better phone tomorrow, they might be eating their dinner now.
Might
You never know, they might give us a 10% discount.
Modal verbs are a part of the larger category called auxiliary verbs which are verbs that cannot be
used on their own. They need to be accompanied by another (main) verb. Sometimes modal verbs
are called modal auxiliaries.
The following words are modal verbs: Can, Could, May, Might, Must, Shall, Should, Will, Would.
They are modal auxiliary verbs that provide additional information about the verb that follows it.
Modal verbs are used to express ability, obligation, permission, assumptions, probability and
possibility, requests and offers, and advice. Each modal verb can have more than meaning which
depends on the context of that sentence (or question).
You must not walk on the grass. (= You mustn't walk on the grass.)
As you can see in the examples above, contractions of the Modal verb + not are normally possible.
The negative of can is cannot ('not' is joined to 'can') and the contraction is can't
HELPING AND
MODAL AUXILIARY
VERBS
Helping verbs or auxiliary verbs such as will, shall, may, might, can, could, must, ought
to, should, would, used to, need are used in conjunction with main verbs to express shades of
time and mood. The combination of helping verbs with main verbs creates what are called verb
phrases or verb strings. In the following sentence, "will have been" are helping or auxiliary
verbs and "studying" is the main verb; the whole verb string is underlined:
As of next August, I will have been studying chemistry for ten years.
Students should remember that adverbs and contracted forms are not, technically, part of the
verb. In the sentence, "He has already started." the adverb already modifies the verb, but it is not
really part of the verb. The same is true of the 'nt in "He hasn't started yet" (the adverb not,
represented by the contracted n't, is not part of the verb, has started).
Shall, will and forms of have, do and be combine with main verbs to indicate time and
voice. As auxiliaries, the verbs be, have and do can change form to indicate changes in subject
and time.
I shall go now.
I am going now.
Did your
grandmother know Truman?
b. To add emphasis to an
imperative: "Do come in."
(actually softens the command)
d. To contradict a negative
statement: "You didn't do your
homework, did you?" "Oh, but
I did finish it."
As an affirmative statement, to
have can express how certain you
are that something happened
(when combined with an
appropriate modal + have + a
past participle): "Georgia must
have left already." "Clinton might
have known about the gifts."
"They may have voted already."
Modal Auxiliaries
Other helping verbs, called modal auxiliaries or modals, such as can, could, may, might,
must, ought to, shall, should, will, and would, do not change form for different subjects. For
instance, try substituting any of these modal auxiliaries for can with any of the subjects listed
below.
I
you (singular)
he
can write well.
we
you (plural)
they
There is also a separate section on the Modal Auxiliaries, which divides these verbs into
their various meanings of necessity, advice, ability, expectation, permission, possibility, etc., and
provides sample sentences in various tenses. See the section on Conditional Verb Forms for
help with the modal auxiliary would. The shades of meaning among modal auxiliaries are
multifarious and complex. Most English-as-a-Second-Language textbooks will contain at least
one chapter on their usage. For more advanced students, A University Grammar of English, by
Randolph Quirk and Sidney Greenbaum, contains an excellent, extensive analysis of modal
auxiliaries.
The analysis of Modal Auxiliaries is based on a similar analysis in The Scott, Foresman Handbook for Writers by
Maxine Hairston and John J. Ruszkiewicz. 4th ed. HarperCollins: New York. 1996. The description of helping verbs
on this page is based on The Little, Brown Handbook by H. Ramsay Fowler and Jane E. Aaron, & Kay Limburg. 6th
ed. HarperCollins: New York. 1995. By permission of Addison-Wesley Educational Publishers Inc. Examples in all
cases are our own.
and prediction:
Uses of Used to
The auxiliary verb construction used to is used
to express an action that took place in the past,
perhaps customarily, but now that action no longer
customarily takes place:
We use modal auxiliary verbs can, may, must in the English language for various meanings - ability,
possiblity, probability, certainty, permission, prohibition, obligation, opinion, speculation, etc.
Can
May
The main difference between may and can is in style. May is more formal than can. Can is typical of
spoken English.
Must
1. It is used for strong obligations. It is personal, because it expresses the speaker's opinion or will.
You must see it. It's the best film I've ever seen.
Mum, must I wash up? - No, you needn't. I've already done it.
Must not has a different meaning. It is used to express prohibition that involves the speaker's will.
Note
Normally, these modal auxiliary verbs are not used in different tenses. The past
tense of can is could, may and must, however, only have the present form. All the other tenses must
be formed in a different way.
We make the passive voice with a verb + be + past participle: This can be done. The laws must be
respected.
Modal verb list with examples and uses PDF