English Modal Verbs May Might Could Can Talking About Possibilities

Hi, I’m Mikey and welcome to Oxford Online
English!

In this lesson, you can learn how to use the
English modal verbs may, might, can and

could.

You’ll learn how to use these modal verbs
to talk about possibilities in English.

Modal verbs are powerful, because you can
use them to express many different ideas and

complex nuances of meaning.

However, they’re also difficult to use well.

Each modal verb can be used in many different
ways!

You can use might, could or may to say that
something is possible in the present or in

the future.

For example:

They could be brothers—they look so alike!

I think it’s possible that they’re
brothers.

Where are my keys?

They might still be in the car.

I think it’s possible that your keys
are still in the car.

It’s raining here, but it may be sunny there.

I think it’s possible that it’s sunny
there.

These sentences are all about the present.

There’s no difference between could, might
and may here.

You can use any of these three modal verbs
in any of these sentences—it doesn’t matter.

Could and might are more common than may,
but you can choose which modal verb you use.

Be careful with may be—two words, and maybe—one
word.

May be (two words) is a modal verb plus the
verb be; maybe (one word) is an adverb.

They aren’t the same!

You can also talk possibilities in the future:

It could cost more than you expect.

I think it’s possible that it will cost
more than you expect.

You might miss the train unless you leave
now.

I think it’s possible that you’ll
miss the train if you don’t leave now.

I may be around five minutes late.

I think it’s possible that I’ll be
a little late.

It doesn’t matter if you’re talking about
the present or the future; you can use these

modal verbs in the same way.

People will understand if you’re talking
about the present or the future from the context.

For example:

She might be there already.

She might be there tomorrow.

Here, the first sentence is about the present,
and the second is about the future.

You can understand this from the meaning,
not from the modal verb.

You can also make negatives by adding not
after the modal verb.

Use negatives to say that you think it’s
possible that something is not true, or that

something will not happen, in the present
or the future.

In this case, you can only use may or might.

You can’t use could to talk about negative
possibilities.

For example:

They might not be ready.

I think it’s possible that they aren’t
ready.

This could be in the present or in the future—you
can’t tell just from this sentence.

He may not be able to help you.

I think it’s possible that he won’t
be able to help you.

There’s no difference between using may
or might here, but remember that there’s

no way to use could in these sentences.

What about can?

We haven’t mentioned can until now, because
can behaves differently.

Let’s see how!

Look at an example that you just saw:

She might be there tomorrow.

This is a specific possibility.

You’re talking about one person, one place
and one time.

Let’s add some more details to make it easier
to see this:

Sarah might be at the party tomorrow.

You can use might, may or could to express
specific possibilities.

You use can to express general possibilities.

You’ve seen what a specific possibility
is.

What does ‘general possibility’ mean?

Can you explain it?

A general possibility is something which is
true for many people, in many places, at many

times.

For example:

It can take two hours to get to the airport
if the traffic’s bad.

This possibility doesn’t apply to one person
at one time.

It applies to anyone who tries to get to the
airport when the traffic’s bad.

Let’s look at some more examples:

It can be very wet and cold in spring here.

This is possible every year, not just
in one year.

He can be very difficult to deal with when
he’s in a bad mood.

This is possible every time he’s in
a bad mood, not just one time.

Moving countries can be a stressful experience.

It’s possible that moving countries
is stressful whoever you are, wherever you

move to and whenever you do it!

If you’re talking about general possibilities,
you can only use can.

You can’t use could, might or may.

General possibilities refer to both the present
and the future together.

For example, if you say:

It can be very wet and cold in spring here.

You mean that this is possible this year,
in the present, and next year, in the future,

and the year after that, and so on.

Also, general possibilities are only positive;
there’s no such thing as a negative general

possibility.

Let’s practise!

Look at four sentences.

For each one, decide if it expresses a general
possibility or a specific possibility.

Which modal verbs could you use in each case?

Pause the video and think about your answers.

If it’s difficult, review this part and
the previous part of the video.

Ready?

Let’s look at the answers.

In the first sentence, the word tomorrow makes
it specific.

Tomorrow is one day.

That means you can use could, might or may
in this sentence.

In the second sentence, in July in the south
is a general idea.

You’re talking about one place, but you’re
also talking about every year.

So, you should use can.

In the third sentence, you’re talking about
a general tendency which she has.

She can get angry any time when people don’t
listen to her, not just one time.

So, you need to use can.

The fourth sentence is talking about one reaction
to one thing.

The words when she finds out refer to one
piece of news, which she will find out at

a specific time in the future.

So, you need to use could, might or may.

Now, you’ve seen how to use might, may,
could and can to talk about possibility in

the present or the future.

But what about the past?

Let’s start with some examples.

Look at three sentences, and try to work out
how to talk about possibilities in the past:

Where is he?

I guess he might have missed the train.

I don’t know where the tickets are.

I may have left them in the hotel.

What was that noise?

I suppose it could have been the wind.

To talk about possibilities in the past, use
could, might or may, plus have, plus a past

participle.

Again, it doesn’t matter if you use could,
may or might here.

There’s no difference in meaning.

You can’t use can in these sentences.

There’s no way to use can to express possibility
in the past.

What do these sentences mean?

Can you explain what they’re saying in other
words?

The first sentence means that you think it’s
possible that he missed the train.

You’re waiting for him; you don’t know
where he is or why he’s late.

In the second sentence, you’re saying that
it’s possible that the tickets are in the

hotel.

You don’t know where the tickets are.

In the third sentence, you heard a noise and
you aren’t sure what it was.

You’re saying that it’s possible that
it was the wind.

You can also talk about negative possibilities
in the past, like this:

He might not have heard you.

It’s possible that he didn’t hear
you.

Their plane may not have arrived yet.

It’s possible that their plane hasn’t
arrived yet.

As before, you can only use may or might to
talk about negative possibilities.

You can’t use could in these sentences.

There’s another way in which could behaves
differently.

Let’s look.

In all the examples you saw in the last section,
positive and negative, you’re talking about

situations where you don’t know what happened
in the past.

For example, if you say their plane may not
have arrived yet, you don’t know if their

plane has arrived or not.

You aren’t sure.

What about this sentence?

You could have hurt yourself!

Be more careful next time!

This example is different.

Can you see how?

If you don’t know, here’s a clue: in this
sentence, do you know what happened, or not?

Did the person you’re talking to hurt themselves,
or not?

In this sentence, you know what happened:
the person didn’t hurt themselves.

You’re saying that getting hurt was a possibility,
but luckily it didn’t happen!

So, there are two kinds of possibility in
the past:

One: you don’t know what happened, and you’re
making a guess.

Two: you know what happened, and you’re
talking about a possibility which didn’t

occur.

In the first case, you can use any of the
three verbs: may, might or could.

In the second case, you can only use could.

You often need this when you’re talking
about something bad which didn’t happen.

Let’s see some more examples of this second
case:

They were very unlucky—they could easily
have won.

They didn’t win, but it was close, so
winning was a possibility.

She could have lost all of her money when
the company went under.

She didn’t lose all of her money, but
it was a possibility.

Of course, being in an accident was scary,
but it could have been much worse.

The accident wasn’t serious, but worse
results were a possibility.

In all of these sentences, you know what happened
in the past, and you’re talking about a

past possibility which didn’t actually happen.

Now, you’ve seen how to use the modal verbs
might, may, can and could to talk about possibilities

in English.

Let’s put everything you’ve learned together

Might, could or may can be used to talk about
specific possibilities in the present or the

future:

Take a jumper—it might be cold outside.

It could be a good game tomorrow.

You can use can to talk about general possibilities:

Using a credit card can be an expensive way
to buy things.

You can use could, may or might, plus have,
plus a past participle, to talk about possibilities

in the past:

They may have got lost.

I’ll call them and find out where they are.

You can use may or might to talk about negative
possibilities, meaning that there’s a possibility

that something won’t happen or didn’t
happen:

It might work, but it might not.

He may not have seen the message yet.

Finally, you can use could to talk about two
kinds of possibility in the past: situations

where you know what happened, and situations
where you don’t know what happened:

You could have missed the plane!

Don’t be late next time.

I’m not sure why he isn’t here.

I guess he could have missed the plane.

Do you need practice with this topic?

Visit Oxford Online English.com for the
full lesson, including a quiz to help you

check your understanding of English modal
verbs!

Thanks for watching!

See you next time!

大家好,我是 Mikey,欢迎来到牛津在线
英语!

在本课中,您可以学习如何使用
英语情态动词 may、may、can 和

could。

您将学习如何使用这些情态动词
来谈论英语的可能性。

情态动词很强大,因为你可以
用它们来表达许多不同的想法和

复杂的细微差别。

但是,它们也很难很好地使用。

每个情态动词都可以以多种不同的
方式使用!

你可以用math、could或may来表示
某事在现在或将来是可能

的。

例如:

他们可能是兄弟——他们长得很像!

我认为他们可能是
兄弟。

我的钥匙在哪里?

他们可能还在车里。

我想你的
钥匙可能还在车里。

这里正在下雨,但那里可能是晴天。

我想那里可能是晴天

这些句子都是关于现在的。

在这里,可能,可能和可能之间没有区别

你可以
在这些句子中的任何一个中使用这三个情态动词中的任何一个——没关系。

可能和可能比可能更常见,
但您可以选择使用哪种情态动词。

小心可能是——两个词,也许——一个
词。

可能是(两个词)是情态动词加上
动词be; 也许(一个词)是副词。

他们不一样!

您还可以谈论未来的可能性:

它的成本可能比您预期的要高。

我认为它的成本可能会
超出您的预期。

除非你现在离开,否则你可能会错过火车

我想
如果你现在不离开,你可能会错过火车。

我可能会迟到五分钟左右。

我想我可能会
迟到一点。

无论您是在谈论现在还是未来,都没有关系
。 您可以

以相同的方式使用这些情态动词。

如果您
从上下文中谈论现在或未来,人们会理解。

例如:

她可能已经在那里了。

她明天可能会在那里。

在这里,第一句话是关于现在的
,第二句话是关于未来的。

您可以从含义
而不是情态动词中理解这一点。

您也可以通过在情态动词后添加 not 来制作否定
词。

用否定词来表示你
认为某事可能不是真的,或者

某事不会在现在
或将来发生。

在这种情况下,您只能使用 may 或可能。

你不能用can来谈论消极的
可能性。

例如:

他们可能还没有准备好。

我认为他们可能还没有
准备好。

这可能是现在,也可能是将来——你
不能仅仅从这句话中分辨出来。

他可能无法帮助你。

我认为他
可能无法帮助您。

在这里使用 may 或 may 没有区别
,但请记住,

在这些句子中没有办法使用 can。

罐头呢?

直到现在我们还没有提到 can,因为
can 的行为不同。

让我们看看如何!

看一个你刚刚看到的例子:

她明天可能会在那里。

这是一种特定的可能性。

你在谈论一个人,一个地方
和一个时间。

让我们添加更多细节以便更
容易看到这一点:

莎拉明天可能会参加聚会。

您可以使用可能、可能或可能来表达
特定的可能性。

你可以用 can 来表达一般的可能性。

你已经看到了具体的可能性
是什么。

“一般可能性”是什么意思?

你能解释一下吗?

普遍可能性是
对许多人、在许多地方、在许多时间都适用的事情

例如:

如果交通状况不佳,可能需要两个小时才能到达机场

这种可能性一次不适用于
一个人。

它适用于
在交通状况不佳时试图前往机场的任何人。

让我们再看一些例子

:这里的春天可能非常潮湿和寒冷。

每年都有可能,而
不仅仅是一年。

当他心情不好时,他可能很难
相处。

这在他每次
心情不好的时候都有可能,而不仅仅是一次。

搬家可能是一种压力很大的经历。

无论您是谁,无论您搬到哪里,无论何时,移动国家都可能会给您带来压力

如果您谈论的是一般可能性,
则只能使用 can。

您不能使用可能、可能或可能。

一般可能性指的是现在
和未来。

例如,如果您说

:这里的春天可能非常潮湿和寒冷。

你的意思是今年
、现在、明年、未来

、后年,等等都是可能的。

此外,一般可能性只是积极的;
不存在否定的一般

可能性。

让我们练习吧!

看四句话。

对于每一个,决定它是表达一般
可能性还是特定可能性。

你可以在每种情况下使用哪些情态动词?

暂停视频并思考你的答案。

如果很难,请查看这部分和
视频的前一部分。

准备好?

让我们看看答案。

在第一句话中,明天这个词
使它具体化。

明天是一天。

这意味着您可以在这句话中使用可能、可能或可能

在第二句中,七月在南方
是一个大意。

你在谈论一个地方,但你
也在谈论每年。

所以,你应该使用can。

在第三句话中,你说的
是她的普遍倾向。

当人们不
听她的话时,她随时都会生气,而不仅仅是一次。

所以,你需要使用can。

第四句是
对一件事的一种反应。

她发现的话是指
一条消息,她会

在未来的特定时间发现。

因此,您需要使用可能、可能或可能。

现在,您已经了解了如何使用可能、可能、
可能和可能来谈论

现在或未来的可能性。

但是过去呢?

让我们从一些例子开始。

看三个句子,试着弄清楚
如何谈论过去的可能性:

他在哪里?

我猜他可能错过了火车。

我不知道门票在哪里。

我可能把它们留在了酒店。

那是什么声音?

我想这可能是风。

要谈论过去的可能性,使用
可能、可能或可能,加上有,加上

过去分词。

同样,在这里使用 can、
may 或 might 都没关系。

意义没有区别。

你不能在这些句子中使用 can。

没有办法用 can 来表达
过去的可能性。

这些句子是什么意思?

你能用其他语言解释他们在说什么
吗?

第一句话的意思是你
认为他可能错过了火车。

你在等他; 你不
知道他在哪里,也不知道他为什么迟到。

在第二句话中,您是
说门票可能在

酒店中。

你不知道门票在哪里。

在第三句话中,您听到了声音,但
您不确定它是什么。

你说有
可能是风。

您也可以谈论
过去的负面可能性,例如:

他可能没有听到您的声音。

他可能没有听到
你的声音。

他们的飞机可能还没有到。

他们的飞机可能还没有
到。

和以前一样,你只能用 may 或 might 来
谈论消极的可能性。

你不能在这些句子中使用可能。

还有另一种可能表现
不同的方式。

我们看看吧。

在您在上一节中看到的所有示例中
,无论是正面的还是负面的,您都在谈论

您不知道过去发生了什么的情况

例如,如果你说他们的飞机可能还
没有到,你不知道他们的

飞机是否到了。

你不确定。

这句话呢?

你可能会伤害自己!

下次小心点!

这个例子是不同的。

你能看出怎么做吗?

如果你不知道,这里有一个线索:在这
句话中,你知道发生了什么吗?

与您交谈的人是否伤害了自己

在这句话中,您知道发生了什么:
这个人没有伤害自己。

你说受伤是有可能的,
但幸运的是它没有发生!

所以,过去有两种
可能:

一种:你不知道发生了什么,你
在猜测。

二:你知道发生了什么,而且你在
谈论一种没有发生的可能性

在第一种情况下,您可以使用以下
三个动词中的任何一个:may、may 或 could。

在第二种情况下,您只能使用 can。

当你
谈论一些没有发生的坏事时,你经常需要这个。

让我们再看看第二种情况的更多例子

他们很不走运——他们很容易
就赢了。

他们没有赢,但很接近,所以
赢是有可能的。

当公司倒闭时,她可能已经失去了所有的钱

她并没有失去所有的钱,
但这是有可能的。

当然,发生事故很可怕,
但情况可能会更糟。

事故并不严重,但
结果可能会更糟。

在所有这些句子中,您都知道过去发生
了什么,并且您在谈论

实际上并未发生的过去可能性。

现在,您已经了解了如何使用情态动词
可能、可能、可以和可能

在英语中谈论可能性。

让我们把你学到的所有东西放在一起

可能、可以或可以用来谈论
现在或

未来的具体可能性:

穿上一件外套——外面可能很冷。

明天可能是一场精彩的比赛。

你可以用can来谈论一般可能性:

使用信用卡购买东西可能是一种昂贵的
方式。

您可以使用 could、may 或 might,plus have,
加上过去分词来谈论

过去的可能性:

他们可能迷路了。

我会打电话给他们,看看他们在哪里。

您可以使用 may 或 might 来谈论消极
的可能性,这意味着有可能

某事不会发生或没有
发生:

它可能有效,但可能无效。

他可能还没有看到这条消息。

最后,你可以用can来谈论
过去的两种可能性:

你知道发生了什么的情况,以及
你不知道发生了什么的情况:

你可能错过了飞机!

下次不要迟到。

我不确定他为什么不在这里。

我猜他可能错过了飞机。

你需要练习这个话题吗?

访问 Oxford Online English.com 获取
完整课程,包括一个测验,帮助您

检查您对英语情态
动词的理解!

感谢收看!

下次见!