25+ Years Teaching 30+ Books Authored 1000s of Students Guided
Hardoi, Uttar Pradesh +91 94155 24671 WhatsApp
← All Blog Topics

Modal Verbs: Can, Could, May, Must, Should — Used Right

Modal verbs (can, could, may, might, will, would, shall, should, must, ought to) main verb se pehle aakar uska mood badalte hain — ability, permission, possibility, obligation. Inke baad hamesha V1 (base form) aata hai, aur ye kabhi -s/-ed/-ing nahi lete.

1. What each modal really means

  • Can / Could — ability & informal permission: She can solve it. Could I sit here?
  • May / Might — formal permission & possibility: You may leave. It might rain.
  • Must — strong obligation / near-certainty: You must submit it today. He must be tired.
  • Should / Ought to — advice / expectation: You should revise daily.
  • Will / Would — future & politeness: Would you help me?

2. Past & certainty forms

Modal + have + V3 past ke liye: She must have finished (zaroor khatam kiya hoga); He should have told me (batana chahiye tha, bataya nahi).

📝 Example"You ___ smoke here" (prohibition) → must not. "___ I borrow your pen?" (polite permission) → May/Could.

3. Degrees of certainty

must (90% sure) > should > may/might/could (50%). Exam me context dekh kar degree choose karo.

⚠️ Common Mistakes
  • Modal ke baad to nahi (sirf ought to exception): must to gomust go.
  • Do modals saath nahi: will canwill be able to.
  • must not = prohibition; need not = no obligation — ye opposite hain, mat milao.
⚡ Quick RevisionModal + V1 (no to, no -s). must=strong, should=advice, may/might=possibility. Past = modal + have + V3.

Apni preparation ko expert guidance do

Dr Pankaj Tiwari ke saath PGT · TGT · KVS · UGC-NET English ki taiyari — 25+ saal ka teaching anubhav, 30+ authored books. Pehli class free.

Enroll Now 💬 WhatsApp Dr Tiwari
← Back to all topicsFree Study Notes →