Modal verbs are easy to spot because there are so few of them. In addition to must, shall, will, should, would, can, could, may and might, we can add ought to and have to. If we are told that we 'must ...
By now, you should find ‘would’ more useful than ever. This is based on the analysis we started last week, projecting the different contexts the modal verb conveys different meanings. We established ...
Modal verbs, which express a likelihood, ability, permission, request, order etc., usually help main verbs to state the future. It is the reason they are categorised as auxiliary verbs in the context.
There are three basic kinds of verbs plus many subclasses. Here we cover only the three basic types. Initially, verbs are divided into main verbs and auxiliary verbs. Then auxiliary verbs are divided ...
If you ask me which modal verb is the most versatile, I am likely to choose ‘would’. Although it is readily identified as the past tense form of ‘will’, it has far more uses, to the extent that it ...