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Modal auxiliaries 1: present and future

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  4. B) Make up a similar situation (a visit to a concert, a variety theatre, a circus, etc.) for your fellow-students to present it in the form of a dialogue.
  5. Choose Present Indefinite or Present Continuous.
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  7. Deciding the Future
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  9. Element 2: Presenting Different Types of Findings
  10. End your presentation with a brief summary and/or conclusion. Finally, move to questions/comments or discussion.
  11. Ex. 1. Open the brackets using Present Perfect or Past Indefinite.
  12. Ex. 3. Translate the sentences from Russian into English, using one of the Present Tenses.

Explanations

Don't have to and must not

1. Don't have to refers to an absence of obligation.

You don't have to work tomorrow.

2. Must not refers to an obligation not to do something.

You must not leave the room before the end of the test.

Should

Where should appears, ought to can also be used.

1. Expectation

This film * should be really good.

2. Recommendation

I think you * should talk it over with your parents.

In writing, should can be used to express a strong obligation politely.

Guests should vacate their rooms by midday.

3. Criticism of an action

You * shouldn't eat so much late at night.

4. Uncertainty

Should I leave these papers on your desk?

5 Should and verbs of thinking

Should is often used with verbs of thinking, to make anopinion less direct.

I should think that model would sell quite well.

6. With be and adjectives describing chance

This group of adjectives includes odd, strange, funny (=odd) and the expression What a coincidence.

It's strange that you should be staying in the samehotel!

7. After in case to emphasise unlikelihood:

I'm taking an umbrella in case it should rain.

Could

1. Could is used to express possibility or uncertainty.

This could be the house.

2. Could is used with comparative adjectives to express possibility or impossibility.

The situation couldn't be worse.

It could be better.

3. Could is used to make suggestions.

We could go to that new restaurant opposite the cinema.

4. Could is used to express unwillingness.

I couldn 't possibly leave Tim here on his own.

Can

1. Can with be is used to make criticisms.

You can be really annoying, you know!

2. Can is also used with be to refer to capability.

Winter here can be really cold.

Must and can't

These refer to present time only. (See bound to.) In expressing certainty, they are opposites.

This must be our stop. (I'm sure it is.)

This can't be our stop. (I'm sure it isn't.)

May and might

1. May can be used to express although clauses:

She may be the boss, but that is no excuse for shouting like that.

2. May/might as well

This describes the only thing left to do, something which the speaker is not enthusiastic about.

Nobody else is going to turn up now for the lesson, so you may as well go home.

3. May and might both express possibility or uncertainty. May is more common in formal language.

The peace conference may find a solution to the problem.

4. There is an idiomatic expression with try, using may for present reference, and might for past reference.

Try as I might, I could not pass my driving test.

Although I tried hard, I could not pass my drivingtest.

Shall

1. Shall can be used with all persons to emphasise something which the speaker feels is certain to happen or wants to happen.

I shall definitely give up smoking this year.

We shall win! (shall is stressed in this sentence)

2. Similarly, shall is used in formal rules and regulations.

No player shall knowingly pick up or move the ball of another player.

Will

1. Will can be used to express an assumption.

-The phone's ringing. - That' ll be for me.

2. Will /won't can be used emphatically to tell someone of the speaker's intention, or to forbid an action, in response to a will expression.

- I'll take the money anyway, so there!

- You won't!

-I will!

Similarly I won't can mean I refuse, and I will can mean I insist.

-I won't do it! - Yes, you will!

Would

1. Would can refer to an annoying habit, typical of a person.

Jack would get lost, wouldn't he! It's typical!

2. Would is used in sentences expressing certainty, where the sentence is a suppressed conditional sentence.

Nobody would agree with that idea. (if we asked them)

Life wouldn't be worth living without you. (if you weren't there)

3. Would can be used after be followed by adjectives doubtful, unlikely toemphasise a tentative action.

It's unlikely that Jim would do something like that.

Would can be used after doubt in the same way.

I doubt whether Helen would know the answer.

Need

1. Need to is not a modal auxiliary, and behaves like a normalverb.

Do you need to use the photocopier?

2. Need is a modal auxiliary, but mainly in question and negative forms.

Need you make so much noise?


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