Transcript Articles

Modals/ Modal verbs /
Modal Auxiliaries
Forms of Modals

Modals do not take on -s as they do not indicate
number or person.
The nurse can give the injection.
The computers will process the information.

The base form of the verb is used after the
modal verb.
The planes must take off now.
The wastage can be stopped.
The technical glitch could have been avoided.
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Forms of Modals

When modals take on the negative not, the
latter follows the modal even when be or have
are present.
The investigation may not end today.
The survey should not have yielded such skewed
results.
The gamers could not be there at this hour.
Do not use the contracted forms of
negative modals in formal writing.
Use cannot and not can not .
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Uses of Modals




To express ability
To express degrees of possibility
To express advisability
To express necessity or lack of necessity
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Modals Expressing Ability
Modals
Meaning
Example
Can
Express physical
ability or skill or the
lack of it
The new employee can drive.
The astronaut cannot go up the space
shuttle today.
Could
Express a past ability In the 1900s, people could not
or skill and a lack of it communicate with each other across the
in the past
globe via telecommunication.
Could have +
past participle
Refers to a past
situation in which the
ability for something
to happen existed,
but the reverse
happened.
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The team could have been the
champions.
Modals Expressing Degrees of
Possibility
cannot
Unlikely





may/might not
should
must
highly likely
To express impossibility or near impossibility, use cannot.
To express low possibility, use may/may not; might/ might not; or
could/ could not.
To express moderate possibility, use should/ should not.
To express high possibility or probability, use must.
To express certainty or human intentions, use will/ will not. In the
past context, use would/ would not.
See Raimes (2006) pp. 74-75 for
examples
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Modals Expressing Advisability



To express whether something is a good
idea or not, use should or should not.
To express an advisable action that did not
occur in the past, use should have + past
participle.
To express a past action that was not
advisable, use should not have + past
participle.
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Modals Expressing Necessity or
Lack of Necessity


To express necessity, use must or the
phrasal verbs has/have to.
To express lack of necessity, use the phrasal
alternative do/does/did have to.
Must not expresses a prohibition, not a lack of necessity.

To express a necessity in the past, use had
to.
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Phrasal Alternatives to Modal
Auxiliaries
Meaning
Modal Auxiliary
Phrasal Alternative
certainty
will
be going to
ability
can
be able to
advisability
should
had better, ought to
necessity
must
have to, have got to,
be supposed to
past necessity
had to
lack of necessity
do not have to
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Sources
Lane, A. and Lange, E. (1999). Writing Clearly: An
Editing Guide (2nd ed.). Boston: Heinle and Heinle
Publishers, 50-65
Raimes, A. (2006). Grammar Troublespots: A Guide for
Student Writers (3rd ed.). New York: Cambridge
University Press, 73-80.
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