Modverbs Theory
Modverbs Theory
Modverbs Theory
MODAL VERBS
Unit 1 MEANING AND USE
1. Modal verbs, or simply modals, express modality, i.e. the speaker’s attitude towards
the action in the sentence. The area of meaning referred to as modality is rather broad,
and the degree of modality may be strong or weak. Thus, modal verbs are used to
express:
necessity (must shows strong necessity; need shows weaker necessity; to
have to expresses necessity due to some circumstances);
possibility (can is used for strong possibility; may for weak possibility);
duty (should and ought to are used to talk about duty, but ought to is
stronger,) etc.
Each modal verb may express a wide range of modality. Here is a quick
reference to the major meanings of the modal verbs dealt in this chapter:
can /could express ability, possibility, uncertainty, doubt, astonishment,
permission, prohibition;
may/ might express possibility, criticism, requests, permission, hope;
must is used to express obligation, necessity, prohibition, supposition;
need expresses obligation or absence of obligation;
to have to expresses necessity;
to be to is used for possibility, obligation, orders, and to express things fated to
happen;
ought to and should express obligation, advice, deduction. Should is also
found in emphatic constructions and subordinate clauses;
shall/ will/ would are used for requests, orders, offers, and to describe
characteristic habit, certainty or supposition.
Unit 2 CAN/COULD
The modal verb can has two forms: can for the Present Indefinite Tense and
could for the Past Indefinite Tense. The equivalent expression to be able to supplies
all the missing forms of the verb can:
I can explain it.
I could explain it.
I don’t think I’ll be able to explain it when I see her.
Can expresses ability or capability, possibility, incredulity or doubt.
Can is used to talk about general ability or capability in present and past (could)
in active and passive structures: I can read a little English. George could play the piano
when he was a boy. Gold can be found in these mountains.
To express the meaning of ability or capability can is often found with verbs of
perception (receiving information through the eyes, ears, etc.) hear, see, smell, etc.: I
can hear music. I could smell something burning, or cognitive verbs understand, follow,
remember: I can’t/don’t understand what Edwin is talking about. It does not always add
very much to the meaning and in this case can is not rendered in Ukrainian: Я чую
музику. Я не розумію, про що говорить Едвін.
NOTE:
Can/could + Perfect Infinitive (or Perfect Continuous Infinitive) are used to
refer the action to the past: Can he have told a lie? Could she have been waiting for us
so long?
2. Can/could are also used to talk about improbability and are found only in
negative sentences (all forms of the Infinitive are possible): It can’t be true. She can’t be
singing in the next room.
NOTE: Can’t + Perfect Infinitive is used to refer the action to the past:
He can’t have told a lie! Couldn’t is also used in this meaning to
make the statement less categorical: She couldn’t have told a lie! In
Ukrainian it is rendered as: Не может бути, щоб… Навряд чи…
4
Unit 3 MAY/MIGHT
The modal verb may has two forms: may for the present tenses
and might for the past tenses. The expression to be allowed and to
be permitted can be used to supply the missing forms of the verb
may: You are to stay in bed until you are allowed to get up.
May is chiefly used to express permission or possibility. It is also
used to express uncertainty, criticism, and wish.
1. May is found:
to grant permission: You may watch TV for as long as you like.
to ask for permission: May I borrow your umbrella, please? It is
more polite than Can I borrow your umbrella?
Might is also used, it is very polite and formal but is less common:
Might I join you?
NOTE: To be allowed to is also used to ask about permission, yet
there is a difference.
Compare: May I take a photo of you? = Will you allow it?
Are we allowed to take photos? = What is the rule?
1. May is more common when the speaker gives permission: You may borrow my
book = ‘I give you permission to take it’, or in impersonal statements concerning
authority: An accused person may (=has the right) to appeal). A police officer may ask for
your driving license. Though in informal English, in colloquial speech can/could are
used: He can borrow my car.
2. Can would be much more usual than may in the meaning ‘to have permission’:
I can leave / I’m allowed to leave… . But may/might are more usual than can/could in
indirect speech: He says he may leave the room / She said they might leave the room.
4. Both cannot/could not and may not/might not are used to express
improbability. But the degree of faith expressed by may not/might not are less, this
verb points to a less definitive improbability or possibility.
Compare:
It may not be true (Perhaps it is not true).
It can’t be true (It is certainly not true).
He may/might not have understood (Perhaps he didn’t understand).
He can’t/couldn’t have understood (He certainly didn’t understand).
5. Can/could occur when there is an idea of condition: Why don’t you ring him?
You can/could use my mobile phone.
8
Unit 4 MUST
Unit 5 NEED
1. Need can be used both as an ordinary verb in the meaning ‘require’ (Everyone
needs to rest sometimes. Do we need to reserve seats? We will need to repair our house. He
did not need to be told twice. If we want to pass our exams we will need to work hard) and as
a modal auxiliary verb expressing immediate necessity and obligation. (We needn’t
reserve seats – there will be plenty of room.).
2. As a modal verb need has only one tense – the Present, and the same form is
used for all persons.
The modal verb need is mostly used in negative sentences where need not
expresses lack of necessity: You needn’t go there and interrogative sentences: Need
you go? where a negative answer is often expected: Need you leave so soon? (≈ surely
not / I hope not). These questions can be answered with must or needn’t: Need I type
this letter again? ~ Yes, you must. / No, you needn’t. I needn’t go to the dentist.
Need also occurs in combination with negative–type adverbs like hardly, never,
seldom, rarely, scarcely: She need never know what you have just told me.
Need not + Perfect Infinitive is served to say that something was done
unnecessary: You needn’t have told him about my plans.
Need + …ing means ‘to require’: Your hair needs cutting. The windows need
washing.
NOTE: Need is not used to talk about habitual, general necessity.
11
Unit 7 TO BE + INFINITIVE
To be + Infinitive, or to be to, is a modal expression that can be used only in
two Tenses – the Present Indefinite (is, are) and the Past Indefinite (was, were).
NOTE: Was/were to + Perfect Infinitive are used to show that a previously arranged
event didn’t happen: I was to have met you at six, but something urgent
happened.
NOTE: Sometimes only the Passive Infinitive is used in this case: To be taken three
times a day after meals (on a medicine bottle).
Should and ought to are very much alike in meaning and are
often interchangeable.
Ought to has more stress on the meaning of moral obligation,
whereas should is common in instructions and corrections.
Notice some peculiarities in the shades of meanings of must, should, ought to:
1. Should/ought to express obligation or advisability. Must in this meaning
sounds too forceful and peremptory: You should do it at once. You ought to do it at once.
You must do it at once.
2. Should / ought to + Perfect Infinitive show that the action has not been
fulfilled though it was desirable: You should have helped him. (But you didn’t do that)
3. Must + Perfect Infinitive denotes conclusions about the past: He must have
come by taxi. (I suppose)
rhetorical questions beginning with why: Why should I do that? It’s rendered in
Ukrainian as: з якого дива…? Why shouldn’t you have dinner with us?
attributive clauses beginning with why after the noun ‘reason’: I don’t see any
reason why we shouldn’t be happy.
subordinate clauses after words expressing personal judgements and reactions:
It’s astonishing that she should say that sort of things to you. I’m sorry you should
think I did it on purpose
if-clauses, after in case, for bear that and lest, so that, in order that: If you
should see Luke, tell him about it. She turned the radio down so that she shouldn’t
wake the children up.
NOTE: It is impossible to use ought to for emotional colouring.
Unit 10 SHALL
Will and would are considered to be the forms of the same verb.
Its original meaning is volition. However, in some of their meanings
the use of will is equal only to would which denotes an actual fact in
the past; in other meanings will is found alongside would which
expresses unreality in the present or serves as a more polite form of
will.