Download presentation
1
MODAL VERBS 2nd of Bachillerato
2
DEFINITION MODALS ARE SPECIAL VERBS WITH THE FOLLOWING FEATURES:
1. THEY DO NOT CHANGE IN TERMS OF PERSON, GENDER OR NUMBER He can speak four languages / You can write Chinese 2. THEY FORM THE NEGATIVE AND THE INTERROGATIVE FORMS WITHOUT DO Must she do her homework? / We shouldn’t smoke 3. THEY ARE FOLLOWED BY THE BASE FORM OF A VERB (INFINITIVE OR PERFECT INFINITIVE) They may come to see us / I must have talked to her before leaving 4. THEY DO NOT HAVE INFINITIVE, GERUND, PARTICIPLE, FUTURE FORMS OR COMPOUND TENSES *to can, *canning, *canned, *will can, *have been canning/*is canned/etc. 5. THEY ARE USED LIKE ‘AUXILIARY VERBS’ IN SHORT ANSWERS, QUESTIONS TAGS & WITH SO, NEITHER, NOR ‘Must I wear a uniform?’ ‘Yes, you must’ You can’t lend me a pound, can you? They ought to study harder for the exams. So ought we.
3
SEMI-MODALS & NEED TO BE ABLE TO & HAVE TO ARE SEMI-MODAL VERBS BECAUSE THEY SHARE MOST OF THE CHARACTERISTICS OF MODAL VERBS EXCEPT THAT THEY CAN BE CONJUGATED I would like to be able to stay here. You’ll be able to walk soon. Have you been able to solve the problem? When I was young I had to get up at 5 o’clock in the morning. They had had to train hard before the athletics competition took place. NEED TO IS NOT A MODAL, NOR A SEMI-MODAL, BUT IT SHARES SOME OF THEIR USES AND MEANINGS One needs to have a visa to go to the U.S.A. He needs to get a new pair of trousers.
4
CAN / BE ABLE TO / CAN’T CAN expresses:
a) General ability or capacity to do sth She can lift me up with one hand b) Possibility Even expert drivers can make mistakes c) Ask for and give permission Can we borrow these books? d) Offers, suggestions & requests I can help you with the washing up. We can talk about that later. Can you come here a minute, please? BE ABLE TO expresses: a) General ability to do sth One day people will be able to run a kilometre in two minutes We have been able to cook the dinner on time. b) Particular ability to do sth on a specific situation in past (with the meaning of manage to, succeed in) How many eggs were you able to eat at the festival competition? How many eggs did you manage to eat at the festival competiton?
5
CAN / BE ABLE TO / CAN’T CAN’T expresses:
a) Lack of ability or capacity I can’t cook a Spanish omelette. b) Impossibility Humans can’t fly on their own. c) Prohibition You can’t speak loudly at the hospital. d) Negative deduction or certitude that sth is impossible They can’t be at home. The lights are off. That can’t be the postman, it’s only seven o’clock.
6
COULD COULD is the past form of CAN and it expresses:
a) General ability or capacity to do sth in the past He was a terrific liar: he could make anybody believe him. b) Polite requests Could I see you tomorrow evening? c) Less direct suggestions or offers I could do the shopping for you, if you’re tired. d) More remote possibility Her performance was the best that could be hoped for.
7
MAY / MIGHT MAY expresses:
a) Possibility We may go climbing in the Alps next summer. b) Ask for or give permission May I put the TV on? Visitors may not feed the animals. c) Ask for sth May I have some more wine, please? MIGHT expresses: a) Less possibility Peter might phone. If he does, could you ask him to ring later? b) Ask for permission (more formal) Might I sit on this chair?
8
WOULD / SHALL SHOULD / OUGHT TO
WOULD expresses: a) Polite requests Would you open the window, please? b) Together with like, offers & invitations Would you like a cup of tea? SHALL expresses: a) Offers Shall I carry your bag? b) Suggestions Shall we go to the concert? c) Requests for insructions How shall I cook the chicken? d) Requests for avice What shall I do? SHOULD / OUGHT TO express: a) Advice or opinion You should go and see Mary. *Slight difference of use: should is used to give a subjective opinion or personal advice; ought to has a more objective force (talking about laws, duties & regulations). People ought to vote even if they don’t agree with any of the candidates
9
MUST / HAVE TO MUST expresses:
a) Obligation (more commonly used when the obligation comes from the speaker, in present) I really must stop smoking. You must be here by 8 o’clock at the latest. b) Logic deduction about a present event (to say that we are sure about sth because it’s logical) Mary must have some problem: she keeps crying. There’s the doorbell. It must be Roger. HAVE TO expresses: a) Obligation (more commonly used when the obligation comes from ‘outside’ –a rule, an order, etc., in present; anytime in other tenses) I have to work from 9 a.m. till 5 p.m. Did you have to go to church on Sundays when you were a child?
10
NEED TO / NEEDN’T NEED TO is not a modal, nor a semi-modal, but it is used in affirmative sentences to express: a) Obligation One needs to have a visa to go to the U.S.A. b) Necessity He needs to get a new pair of trousers. NEEDN’T is a modal and it expresses: a) Lack of necessity or obligaton You needn’t try to explain. We needn’t book a table, the restaurant won’t be full tonight.
11
DON’T HAVE TO / MUSTN’T DON’T HAVE TO expresses:
a) Lack of necessity or obligaton You don’t have to come early tomorrow. MUSTN’T expresses: a) Prohibition You mustn’t move any of the papers on my desk.
12
PERFECT MODALS MUST HAVE + participle expresses a logical deduction about a past event (certainty that sth was true) The lights have gone out. A fuse must have blown. MAY / MIGHT HAVE + participle expresses a guess about a past action Polly’s very late. She may have missed the train. ‘What do you think that noise was?’ ‘It might have been a cat.’ COULD HAVE + participle expresses ability to do sth in the past which in the end was not done I could have married anybody I wanted to (but I didn’t). COULDN’T HAVE + participle expresses certainty that sth did not happen I couldn’t have won, so I didn’t go in for the race.
13
WOULD HAVE + participle expresses desire to do sth in the past which in
fact couldn’t be done She would have arried earlier but she was delayed. SHOULD / OUGHT TO HAVE + participle expresses a criticism or regret after an event I wonder where she is. She should have arrived by now. I ought to have gone out last night. I’m sorry I didn’t. SHOULDN’T HAVE + participle expresses a criticism or regret after an event You shouldn’t have told him anything about our conversation. NEEDN’T HAVE + participle expresses an unnecesary past action I needn’t have bought all that wine, only three people came to the dinner.
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.