Modal Verbs 2024 (Final)
Modal Verbs 2024 (Final)
Modal Verbs 2024 (Final)
A modal auxiliary verb, simply called a modal verb or modal, is used to change the meaning
of the actions indicated by other verbs (commonly known as main verbs). It is used to express
modality. Modality covers a wide range of meaning, but generally comprises two types of
meaning: either the speaker’s attitude toward the proposition being expressed (e.g his degree of
certainty about whether the proposition is true or not) or the actor’s relationship to the described
situation (e.g. whether he is under some kind of obligation to act in a certain way).
Modal verbs are defined by their inability to conjugate for tense and the third person singular
(i.e., they do not take an “-s” at the end when he, she, or it is the subject), and they cannot form
infinitives, past participles, or present participles. All modal auxiliary verbs are followed by a
main verb in its base form (the infinitive without to); they can never be followed by other modal
verbs, lone auxiliary verbs, or nouns.
As with the primary auxiliary verbs, modal verbs can be used with not to create negative
sentences, and they can all invert with the subject to create interrogative sentences.
Although historically, most of the modals can be paired into past and non-past forms (can/could,
may/might, will/would, shall/should), the 'past tense' forms are only in some respects usefully
classified as such from the point of view of meaning. The past forms tend to have implications of
tentativeness or politeness.
1|Page
Can/Could
Three major functions:
(A) ABILITY
As a modal auxiliary verb, can is most often used to express a person or thing's ability to do
something. The modal verb could is also used as a past-tense version of can, indicating what
someone or something was able to do in the past.
Can you remember where they live? [4]
Martha could speak three languages by the age of six. [5]
They say Daniel can cook better than his wife. [6]
I could swim all the way across the lake. [able but not certain]
implies:
It [was / would be] possible for me to swim all the way across the lake.
For this reason, the 'ability' meaning of can/could can be considered a special case of the
'possibility' meaning, viz one in which the possibility of an action is due to some skill or
capability on the part of the subject referent.
2|Page
(B) POSSIBILITY (especially in questions and negatives)
Can is also used to describe the possibility that something can happen, and to issue request and
offers.
Could is also used to express a slight or uncertain possibility, as well as for making a suggestion
or offer.
Even expert drivers can make mistakes. [l]
Her performance was the best that could be hoped for. [2]
If it's raining tomorrow, the sports can take place indoors. [3]
In this sense, can is generally paraphrased by it is possible followed by an infinitive clause; for
example, [l] may be paraphrased:
Sometimes, can indicates a future possibility; thus, for [3] an appropriate paraphrase would be: It
will be possible . . .
(C) PERMISSION
?You can pass your driving test next time you take it.
You will be able to pass your driving test next time you take it.
except that can may be used in clauses, such as if-clauses, in which the present tense is normally
used for future reference:
IF you can pass your driving test next month, you will be able to visit us more often during the
summer.
May/Might
Two major functions:
(a) POSSIBILITY
As a modal auxiliary verb, may/might is used in situations when something is possible but not
certain.
We may never succeed. [It is possible that we'll never succeed] [l]
You may be right. [It is possible that you are right] [2]
There might be some complaints. [3]
As these examples suggest, the most common meaning of may [= possibility] is different from
the possibility sense of can. To paraphrase may, we use it is possible followed by a that-clause,
rather than an infinitive clause. May in this sense may also be paraphrased by It may be that. . . ,
or by the adverb perhaps or possibly. Thus [2] is equivalent to:
4|Page
Might [= possibility] can be used as a (somewhat more tentative) alternative to may [=
possibility], as in [3], and indeed is often preferred to may.
(b) PERMISSION
As a permission auxiliary, may is more formal and less common than can, which (except in fixed
phrases such as if I may) can be substituted for it. However, may is particularly associated with
permission given by the speaker. That is, a difference is sometimes felt between You may leave
when you Like [= 'I permit you . . .'] and You can leave when you like [= 'You are
permitted . . .'], which can mean permission in a more general and impersonal sense.
Again, might is used as a somewhat more tentative, and therefore polite, variant of may [=
permission], as in [7].
Must
(a) (LOGICAL) NECESSITY
There must be some mistake. [1]
You must be feeling tired. [2]
The Smiths must have a lot of money. [3]
The 'logical necessity' meaning of must is parallel to the use of may in the sense of epistemic
possibility; it may, indeed, be called 'epistemic necessity', since it implies that the speaker judges
the proposition expressed by the clause to be necessarily true, or at least to have a high likelihood
of being true. Must in this sense means that the speaker has drawn a conclusion from things
already known or observed. For example, the speaker of [3] has observed the Smiths living in a
large house, travelling in an expensive car, etc, and therefore draws the conclusion that they
'must' be rich. Must [= logical necessity] cannot normally be used in interrogative or negative
clauses. The negative of can [= possibility] fills the gap, so that You must be joking ['It is
necessarily the case that you are joking'] is synonymous with You can't be serious ['It is
impossible that you are serious]. Similarly:
To be healthy, a plant must receive a good supply of both sunshine and moisture. [4]
Must here can be glossed 'It is essential for . . .' or 'It is necessary for . . .'. There is, however, no
implication in [4] of human control, and this distinguishes the root necessity use of must from its
other root sense of obligation, to which we now turn.
You must be back by ten o'clock. ['You are obliged to be back. . .'; 'I require you to be
back. . .'] [5]
We must all share our skills and knowledge. ... [6]
Productivity must be improved, if the nation is to be prosperous. [7]
In these examples, there is the implication, to a greater or lesser extent, that the speaker is
advocating a certain form of behaviour. Thus must, unlike have (got) to, typically suggests that
the speaker is exercising his authority.
An apparent exception to this occurs where the subject is in the first person:
But this, we can say, is perfectly consistent with must [= obligation], because the meaning is one
of self-admonishment, i.e the speaker in this case exercises authority over himself, appealing to
his own sense of duty, expediency, etc.
NOTE:
[a] On the use of obligating must in negative and interrogative clauses.
This has the same meaning as His absence can't have been noticed.
[d] Must [= root necessity] has a sarcastic use in some utterances with a 2nd person subject:
Will/Would (’ll/’d)
(a) PREDICTION
Three related uses of will/would are:.
(a1) The common FUTURE predictive sense of will is illustrated in [l]. The corresponding
'prediction in the past' sense of would is illustrated by:
(a2) The PRESENT predictive sense of will, which is comparatively rare, is similar in meaning
to must in the 'logical necessity' sense:
This meaning can be roughly paraphrased: 'It is (very) likely that. . .'
7|Page
In past tense narratives, would in this sense is a popular means of describing habitual behaviour:
In the spring the birds would return to their old haunts, and the wood would be filled with
their music . . .
This use of would is rather more formal than the equivalent use of used to, and unlike used to,
needs to be associated with a time indicator, such as in the spring in the above example.
(b) VOLITION
Again, three different sub-senses may be distinguished. The volitional range of will extends from
the 'weak volition' of WILLINGNESS to the 'strong volition' of INSISTENCE. Between these
two, there is the more usual volitional sense of INTENTION, which often combines with a sense
of prediction:
(bl) INTENTION
(b2) WILLINGNESS
This meaning is common in requests and offers. On the greater politeness of would.
(B3) INSISTENCE
If you will go out without your overcoat, what can you expect?
She would keep interrupting me.
Shall
Shall is in present-day English (especially in AmE) a rather rare auxiliary and only two uses,
both with a 1st person subject, are generally current:
In the intentional sense, shall is again a formal (and traditionally prescribed) alternative to will
after I or we:
In questions containing shall I/we, shall consults the wishes of the addressee, and thus moves
from a volitional towards an obligational meaning. It is suitable for making offers:
Shall I/we deliver the goods to your home address? [=Do you want me/us to. . .?] [l]
It is only in such questions that shall cannot regularly be replaced by will. Note that [l] illustrates
the exclusive use of we, while [2] illustrates the inclusive use, i.e. the use of we which includes
reference to the addressee(s).
The Past Tense Forms of the Modals: could, might, would, and should
The uses of the past tense modals could, might, would, and should have already been illustrated
earlier, but there is a need to examine the ways in which their uses differ from the corresponding
non-past modals can, may, will, and shall. Five particular uses of the past tense modals are noted.
9|Page
What can be done? [= possibility]
≈Nobody knew what could be done.
Must, together with need (as auxiliary), ought to, and had better, has no present/past distinction.
These verbs are therefore unchanged in indirect speech constructions, even where they refer to
past time.
NOTE:
In free indirect speech, the reporting clause is absent, so that the modal verb may occur back
shifted to the past tense even in main clauses:
NOTE:
[a] There is a rare and archaic use of might outside indirect speech in the sense 'was/were
permitted to':
[b] Corresponding to must, which cannot normally be used in reference to past time outside
indirect speech or indirect thought contexts, the past tense form had to can be used in main
clauses. Compare:
I must confess her latest novels bore me. - I had to confess her latest novels bored me.
[c] In contrast to the past modals could [= ability] and would [= willingness], the constructions
Was/were able to and was/were permitted to emphasize not just the potentiality, but the
fulfillment of an action. For instance, We were able/permitted to leave the camp early typically
conveys the additional message: '. . . and, moreover, we did leave the camp early'. Hence was
able to, but not could, is acceptable in contexts implying fulfillment:
I ran after the bus, and was able to catch it. [l]
*I ran after the bus, and could catch it. [2]
In the negative, however, this contrast between potential and fulfilled action is neutralized.
Hence the following are both acceptable, and mean the same:
[d] On the other hand, could and would may refer to habitual fulfillment:
1 could run after a bus and catch it twenty years ago, but 1 can't do that now.
Hypothetical meaning
The past tense modals can be used in the hypothetical (or unreal) sense of the past tense in both
main and subordinate clauses. Compare:
If United can win this game, they may become league champions. [l]
11 | P a g e
If United could win this game, they might become league champions. [2]
Sentence [2], unlike [l], expresses an unreal condition; i.e it conveys the speaker's expectation
that United will not win the game, and therefore will not become league champions. For past
hypothetical meaning (which normally has a contrary-to-fact interpretation), we have to add the
perfective aspect:
If United could have won that game, they might have become league champions. [3]
The usual implication of this is that United did not win the game.
All past tense modals can be used in this way, to express the hypothetical version of meanings
such as ability, possibility, permission, prediction, and volition. With the epistemic possibility of
might, however, it is the meaning of the following predication, rather than of the modal itself,
that is interpreted hypothetically. This will be evident from the following paraphrases:
On the hypothetical use of would here below. In some contexts, especially when referring to the
future, the 'unreal' meaning of past modals becomes weakened to something like improbability:
From such instances, it is easy to understand how the hypothetical use of past modals has
become adapted to express tentativeness.
NOTE:
Could/might (+ perfective) are used in complaints or rebukes:
The meaning here is close to the same construction with should [= 'ought to']: e.g.: You should
have warned us. . . Could and might are interchangeable in this type of utterance.
12 | P a g e
Tentativeness or Politeness: could, might, and would
Closely related to the hypothetical use above are specialized uses of could, might, and would in
which the past tense form simply adds a note of tentativeness or politeness:
In these constructions, apart from the last-mentioned case of requests, could and might have the
same meaning. In (cI), they both express the epistemic possibility associated with may. This is an
exceptional case, in which could is the past tense equivalent of may instead of can.
NOTE:
There is a tendency for the difference between may and might (in a sense of tentative or
hypothetical possibility) to become neutralized. Thus some speakers perceive little or no
difference of meaning between You may be wrong and You might be wrong. This neutralization
occasionally extends, analogically, to contexts in which only might would normally be
considered appropriate:
?An earlier launch of the lifeboat may [= might] have averted the tragedy. [l]
13 | P a g e
The fact that sentences such as [I] occasionally occur is a symptom of a continuing tendency to
erode the distinctions between real and unreal senses of the modals.
Would/should + infinitive contrasts in syntactic distribution, but not in meaning, with the past
tense and the were-subjunctive, both of which express hypothetical meaning in many subordinate
clauses. Hence the following cannot be interpreted as unreal conditions (although they might,
with some difficulty, be interpreted in some other way on open and hypothetical conditions):
In [3]; the hypothetical past tense is wrongly used in the main clause, whereas in [4], the would
construction is wrongly used in the subordinate clause.
Although the conditional sentence, as in [l] and [2], is the most typical context in which
hypothetical would/should occurs, there are many other contexts in which hypothetical
would/should is appropriately used:
In such sentences, there is often an implicit if. . .; for example, [7] could be expanded: It would
take too long if you did (try to read them all).
14 | P a g e
In this use, should + infinitive is often equivalent to the mandative subjunctive. In using should,
the speaker entertains, as it were, some 'putative' world, recognizing that it may well exist or
come into existence:
NOTE:
[a] Hypothetical would as a 'mood marker' occurs in some types of subordinate clause; e.g. in
nominal clauses (except some clauses which occur with the hypothetical past tense instead of
would, e.g. clauses introduced by imperative suppose or by wish and in relative clauses:
AmE:
[c] Hypothetical would when followed by a verb such as like, low, or prefer is used to indicate a
tentative desire in polite requests, offers, or invitations:
15 | P a g e
She can't/couldn't be swimming all day.
(On the meaning of the perfective aspect after a modal, and in particular the possibility of
paraphrasing it by means of the simple past tense,
'Obligation' can only be expressed with the perfective or progressive when combined with should
or ought to:
As the glosses indicate, these modals, in contrast to must, often imply nonfulfillment of the
obligation. There are also examples which do not have this counterfactual implication; e.g.:
Have you heard from Maria? She should have started her job on Monday.
The combination of both perfective and progressive constructions with the modals is also
possible, subject to the conditions already mentioned:
NOTE:
[a] The use of will + progressive in the sense of 'future as a matter of course' is paralleled by
other modals in the same construction:
means approximately 'It is just possible that Jill will be calling. . .' In contrast to [1], Jill says she
might call this afternoon implies that the visit will depend on Jill's decision.
[b] Note the use of might/could + perfective in certain colloquial speech acts:
16 | P a g e
They could/might have told me! [a complaint]
You could/might have been more careful. [a rebuke]
I might have KNOWN someone would upset her. [an expression of irritation]
17 | P a g e