MODALS

English Grammar | SSC / BPSC / BSSC Exam Prep

Modals — Where They Fit in Verb Classification
H.V. Primary (Be)H.V. Primary (Have)H.V. Modals
Is/am/are, was/were, be/been/beinghas/have/had, Do-Does/didcan/could, may/might, will/would, shall/should, dare/need, must, used to, ought to
Primary H.V. + M.V. = Tenses  |  Modals + M.V. = Modals
Basic Points
  • Modal + V1 (bare infinitive — never V2/V3/V-ing directly)
  • Subject (singular/plural) + modal + V1 — modal never changes form regardless of subject
⚡ QUICK RECALL Modals never take "s" for third person singular, and are always followed by the bare base form (V1) of the main verb — "She can goes" and "He must going" are both wrong.
May vs Might
MayMight
1. Possibility
2. Permission
1. Possibility
2. Used in past tense
Possibility
May = suggests a HIGH degree of possibility | Might = suggests a LOWER degree of possibility
  • The weather may be better tomorrow. (~50%)
  • The weather might be better tomorrow. (~30%)
  • We may go to the cinema tonight. (~50%)
  • We might go to the cinema tonight. (~30%)
Permission
May = used to ask for, give, and refuse permission. It is quite formal.
  • May I come in, sir? — Yes, you may.
  • May I go home now? — No, you may not.
Past Sense
Might — Although "might" is NOT technically the past tense of "may", it is still the best word to describe something that happened in the past (e.g., in reported speech).
  • He asked if he may borrow the car. → He asked if he might borrow the car.
  • I think I may go to the game. → I thought I might go to the game.
⚠ EXAM TRAP In reported/indirect speech, when the reporting verb is in the past tense (said, thought, asked), "may" in the direct speech must shift to "might" in the indirect speech — this is a very common error-spotting target.
Can vs Could — Ability
Can = to define ability/capacity in the Present | Could = to define ability/capacity in the Past
  • I can answer all the questions.
  • She can speak English very well.
  • This room can accommodate more than fifty students.
  • I could swim when I was 5 years old.
  • When I was young, I could easily touch my toes.
  • I couldn't play chess two years ago, but I can now.
Can — Other Uses
Can = Permission | General Truth | Offers
Permission

Can — to give and seek permission

  • You can play with your friends after doing homework.
  • You can go on the trip.
  • Can I have your number?
  • Can I ask a question, please?
General Truth

Can — to talk about things which we think are usually, but not always, true

  • Water can extinguish the fire.
  • Fireworks can frighten pets.
Offers

We use "can" as a question form to make offers

  • Can I help you lift that?
  • Can we do anything for you?
Note: "Cannot" is written as ONE word, not two.
  • ✔ The children cannot be left unsupervised at any time.
  • ✘ The children can not be left unsupervised at any time.
Could — Permission & Possibility
Could = 1. Permission (Formal) | 2. Possibility (Present/Future)
Permission

Could — to ask for permission. Could is more formal and polite than can.

  • Could I ask you a personal question?
  • Could I use your phone?
Possibility

We often use "could" to express possibility in the present and the future.

  • It's yellow. (I am certain that it is yellow. It's a fact.)
  • It could be yellow. (present — I'm not certain that it is yellow.)
  • The storm will get worse. (I'm certain that the storm will get worse.)
  • The storm could get worse. (future — I'm not certain that the storm will get worse.)
Can vs Could — Full Comparison
CanCould
1. Ability (Present)
2. Permission
3. General truth
4. Offers
1. Ability (Past)
2. Permission (Formal)
3. Possibility (Present/Future)
Will / Shall — Future Activity
We use "will/shall" to denote future activity
  • She will graduate from college next spring.
  • They will travel to Europe for their honeymoon.
  • I shall call you later to discuss the details.
  • We shall not tolerate any form of discrimination.
Will — Special Uses With "I/We"
"Will" is specially used with "I/We" to show: Determination, Promise, Warning or Threat, Certainty, and Willingness
  • Despite the difficulties, we will achieve our goals. (Determination)
  • Rest assured, I will do my best to resolve the issue. (Promise)
  • I will fire you, if you don't work properly. (Warning)
  • We will kill you. (Threat)
  • I will definitely attend the meeting tomorrow. (Certainty)
Shall — Special Uses With "He/She/It/They"
"Shall" is specially used with "he, she, it & they" to show: Command, Promise, Warning, Threat & Determination
  • You shall clean your room before going out to play. (Command)
  • You shall receive the support you need to achieve your dreams. (Promise)
  • Obey the rules, or they shall face consequences. (Warning)
  • He shall be fixed. (Threat)
Only "Shall" is used with fixed phrases: be grateful, be forced, be obliged, be able, be unable, be at a loss, be compelled
  • I shall be grateful to you for this act of kindness.
  • They shall be obliged to comply with the new regulations.
  • He shall be at a loss when faced with such a complex problem.
Only "will" is used to show inevitability and certain result
  • The sun will rise again tomorrow.
  • Meditation will help you keep mentally fit.
  • Men will be men.
⚠ EXAM TRAP "Be grateful/forced/obliged/able/unable/at a loss/compelled" ALWAYS pair with "shall" (never "will"), regardless of the subject. This is a fixed-collocation rule frequently tested independent of person/number.
Should
Should = 1. Past Form (of shall) | 2. Duty
Past Form

We use "should" as a "past form" of "shall" in Indirect Speech

  • I said that I should take a break from work.
  • We said that we should follow the safety guidelines.
Duty

Should shows Duty, Obligation, Advice, Instruction

  • As citizens, we should vote in the upcoming elections. (Duty)
  • Students should complete their assignments before the deadline. (Obligation)
  • If you want to improve your health, you should exercise regularly. (Advice)
  • Participants should follow the guidelines provided for the competition. (Instruction)
Would
Would = 1. Past Form (of will) | 2. Polite Request | 3. Past Habit | 4. Wish/Choice
Past Form

We use "would" as a "past form" of "will" in Indirect Speech

  • He said that he would not sign the agreement.
  • She asked me if they would go to the party that night.
Polite Request

"Would" expresses a polite request in interrogative sentences

  • Would it be possible for you to pick me up from the airport?
  • Would you mind helping me carry these boxes upstairs?
Past Habit
  • As a child, she would always play in the park with her friends.
  • Back in the day, we would often go camping during the holidays.
Wish / Choice

We use "would" to show wish, choice, and liking

  • She would prefer to travel by train rather than by bus.
  • She would prefer to wear comfortable clothes rather than dress up.
  • He would prefer to have a quiet evening at home with a good movie.
⚡ QUICK RECALL "Would" for past habit ≈ "used to", but "would" cannot be used for past STATES (e.g., "I would have a car" is wrong for a past possession — use "I had a car" or "I used to have a car"). "Would" only works for repeated past ACTIONS.
Must
"Must" is a strong form of "should". It denotes: Duty, Obligation, Compulsion, Necessity, Certainty, and Strong Possibility
Duty
  • One must obey one's teacher. (Duty)
  • Employees must comply with the company's policies and procedures. (Obligation)
  • To excel in your career, you must constantly strive for improvement. (Necessity)
  • There must be something wrong with the engine. (Strong possibility)
Orders

We use "Must" to give orders

  • All team members must submit their progress reports by Friday.
  • Students must follow the school's dress code at all times.
  • Everything must be in its place before I come back.
Recommendation

We use "Must" to give recommendations

  • You must try the seafood pasta at that restaurant, it's amazing!
  • If you're interested in history, you must visit the ancient ruins in Rome.
Ought To
"Ought to" gives a sense of "moral obligation" and "duty"
  • We ought to respect our elders.
  • Drivers ought to follow traffic rules.
  • People ought to be responsible for their actions.
Used To
"Used to" denotes "habit of Past"
  • I used to play Guitar in college.
  • I used to go to school by bicycle.
"Used to" denotes "habit of present" when used with "be" (Be + used to + Gerund)
  • He is used to smoking.
  • She is used to eating Idli Dosa.
⚠ EXAM TRAP "Used to + V1" (past habit, no longer true) vs "Be + used to + V-ing" (present habit/accustomed to) look similar but mean opposite time periods. "I used to smoke" (past, stopped now) vs "I am used to smoking" (present, still continuing/comfortable with it).
Need — Main Verb vs Modal Verb
Need is used BOTH as a Main Verb AND as a Modal Verb
As a Main Verb
  • He needs my help.
  • We need two more players for the team.
  • He needed some more time to decide the question.
When "need" is used as a Main Verb, Do/Does/Did are used to make it negative and interrogative
  • He needs my help. → He doesn't need my help.
  • We need two more players for the team. → We don't need two more players for the team.
  • He needed some more time to decide the question. → He didn't need some more time to decide the question.
As a Modal Verb
When "need" is used as a Modal verb, it is common in questions and negatives
  • He need not ask my permission.
  • They need not make such a fuss over it.
  • You need not mention this to anyone else.
  • Need we write this down?
Find — Main / Modal Verb
SentenceFunction
He needs new shoes.H.V. (Main Verb)
Need I come again?Modal
You needn't drive me to the station. I can take the bus.Modal
Do you need any money?H.V. / M.V. (Main Verb — needs "do" support)
I need to go there.H.V. (Main Verb)
I needn't go there.Modal
I need hardly say that I am very grateful.Modal
⚠ EXAM TRAP As Main Verb: "need + to + V1" and needs do/does/did for negatives/questions. As Modal: "need + bare V1" (no "to") and forms negatives/questions directly (needn't, Need I...?) without do-support.
Dare — Main Verb vs Modal Verb
Dare is used BOTH as a Main Verb AND as a Modal Verb
As a Main Verb

Dare as a main verb means 'to challenge somebody to do something dangerous, difficult or embarrassing so that they can show that they are brave.'

  • Take it! Dare you.
  • No one dared him to do that prank.

Dare as a main verb can also mean 'to be brave enough to do something':

  • I didn't dare to say that to her face. (HV + MV)
  • I don't dare to mention it to him. (HV + MV)
  • She didn't dare to go home late. (HV + MV)
  • Does anyone dare to go there? (HV + MV)
As a Modal Verb
  • No one dare go there. (Modal + V)
  • Dare anyone go there? (Modal + V)
  • Dare I ask how the project's going? (Modal + V)
  • I daren't tell him the truth; he'll go crazy. (Modal + V)
Comparison — Main Verb vs Modal Verb
TypeNegative StatementAffirmative QuestionNegative Question
Main VerbHe doesn't dare to go there.Does anyone dare to go there?Doesn't he dare to go there?
Modal VerbNo one dares to go there. / No one dare go there.Dare anyone go there?Daren't he go there?
⚠ EXAM TRAP As Main Verb, "dare" needs "to + V1" and do/does/did support. As Modal, "dare" takes bare V1 directly and forms negatives/questions without do-support (daren't, Dare I...?). Both patterns are grammatically valid — don't "correct" one into the other.
Practice — Find Main / Modal Verb (Dare)
#QuestionOptionsAnswer
1I didn't ___ the truth.A) dare to tell B) dare tell C) dared tellA) dare to tell
2Do you ___ what you think?A) dare say B) dare say C) dares to sayB) dare say
3I daren't ___ what I think.A) say B) to sayA) say
4He ___ out at night.A) dare not go B) does not dare to go C) Either could be used hereC) Either could be used here
5She ___ the truth.A) doesn't dare speak B) doesn't dare to speak C) daren't to speakB) doesn't dare to speak
Could Have + V3 (हो/कर सकता था)
Meaning 1: something was possible in the past, or you had the ability to do it, but you didn't do it.
  • I could have stayed up late, but I decided to go to bed early.
  • They could have won the race, but they didn't try hard enough.
  • The boy could have run away from the bullies, but he decided to confront them.
Meaning 2 (negative — couldn't have): something WASN'T possible in the past, even if you had wanted to do it.
  • I couldn't have arrived any earlier. There was a terrible traffic jam. (= it was impossible for me to have arrived any earlier)
  • He couldn't have passed the exam, even if he had studied harder. It's a really, really difficult exam.
Meaning 3: to make a guess about something that happened in the past — you don't know if it's true, just giving an opinion of what maybe happened.
  • Are you out of your mind?! You could have crashed into that wall!
  • Are you crazy? We could have got into an accident.
Should Have + V3 (होना/करना चाहिए था)
Should have + V3 means that something did NOT happen, but we wish it had happened. Used to talk about mistakes/regrets.
  • I should have studied harder! (= I didn't study very hard and so I failed the exam. I'm sorry about this now.)
  • I shouldn't have eaten so much cake! (= I did eat a lot of cake & now I don't feel good.)
  • You should have asked my permission before you used my computer. I'm really angry with you.
Would Have + V3
Meaning 1: Use "would have" to imagine a result (if something had been different in the past) — used in third conditional sentences.
  • If I had enough money, I would have bought a car (but I didn't have enough money, so I didn't buy a car).
  • If we had arrived earlier, we would have caught our flight.
  • If I had brought my umbrella, I wouldn't have got wet in the rain.
Meaning 2: to talk about something you wanted to do but didn't.
  • I would have helped you. I didn't know you needed help. (= If I had known that you needed help, I would have helped you.)
  • I would have called you, but I didn't know your number. (= I wanted to call you but I didn't know your number, so I didn't call you.)
May / Might Have + V3 (शायद कर लिया होगा / हो गया होगा)
May/Might have + V3 — to talk about the possibility that something happened in the past. Could also be used to say that something was true in the past (uncertain).
  • Tanu hasn't arrived yet. She may have missed the train.
  • What was that noise? It might have been an airplane.
Must Have + V3 (अवश्य हो चुका होगा)
"Must have + V3" expresses a strong deduction or conclusion about a past event/situation. Used when you are very certain or convinced that something happened in the past based on available evidence.
  • The roads are wet, so it must have rained earlier. (The speaker is deducing that it rained earlier because the roads are wet.)
  • She must have forgotten about the meeting. (The speaker expresses a strong belief that the person forgot, based on the current situation.)
⚡ QUICK RECALL Perfect modal ladder of certainty about the past: Must have (near-certain, deduction) → May/Might have (uncertain possibility) → Could have (was possible but didn't happen / couldn't have = was impossible) → Should have (regret — didn't happen but wish it had) → Would have (imagined result — third conditional).
Practice — Modal Selection & Error Spotting
#Sentence / QuestionCorrect Answer / Correction
1The weather ___ be better tomorrow. (high probability, ~50%)may
2We ___ go to the cinema tonight. (lower probability, ~30%)might
3He asked if he ___ borrow the car. (reported speech, past)might (not may)
4I thought I ___ go to the game. (reported speech, past)might (not may)
5The children ___ be left unsupervised at any time. (write as one word)cannot
6It ___ be yellow. (present possibility, not certain)could
7The storm ___ get worse. (future possibility, not certain)could
8I ___ be grateful to you for this act of kindness. (fixed phrase)shall (not will)
9They ___ be obliged to comply with the new regulations. (fixed phrase)shall (not will)
10The sun ___ rise again tomorrow. (inevitability)will (not shall)
11He is ___ smoking. (present habit)used to (Be + used to + V-ing)
12I ___ play Guitar in college. (past habit, no longer true)used to
13He needs my help. → Negative form?He doesn't need my help. (Main Verb — do-support)
14You ___ mention this to anyone else. (Modal, negative)need not
15___ we write this down? (Modal, question)Need
16I didn't ___ the truth. (dare + object)dare to tell
17Do you ___ what you think? (dare, modal-like question)dare say
18I daren't ___ what I think.say (bare infinitive)
19She ___ the truth. (main verb dare, negative)doesn't dare to speak
20I ___ stayed up late, but I decided to go to bed early. (possible in past, didn't do it)could have
21I ___ arrived any earlier. There was a terrible traffic jam. (impossible in past)couldn't have
22I ___ studied harder! (regret about a past mistake)should have
23If I had enough money, I ___ bought a car. (imagined past result)would have
24Tanu hasn't arrived yet. She ___ missed the train. (uncertain possibility about the past)may have
25The roads are wet, so it ___ rained earlier. (strong deduction about the past)must have
Master Table — Modals (Quick Revision)
A. Basic Modal Structure
RuleDetail
StructureModal + V1 (bare infinitive)
Subject AgreementModal form never changes with subject (singular/plural)
B. Modal Meanings At a Glance
ModalUses
MayPossibility (high, ~50%), Permission (formal)
MightPossibility (low, ~30%), Past sense of "may" (reported speech)
CanAbility (present), Permission, General truth, Offers
CouldAbility (past), Permission (formal), Possibility (present/future)
WillFuture activity; with I/We: determination, promise, warning/threat, certainty, willingness; inevitability (all subjects)
ShallFuture activity; with He/She/It/They: command, promise, warning, threat, determination; fixed phrases (be grateful/forced/obliged/able/unable/at a loss/compelled)
ShouldPast form of "shall" (reported speech); Duty, obligation, advice, instruction
WouldPast form of "will" (reported speech); Polite request; Past habit; Wish/choice/liking
MustDuty, obligation, compulsion, necessity, certainty, strong possibility; Orders; Recommendation
Ought toMoral obligation, duty
Used toPast habit (used to + V1); Present habit when with "be" (Be + used to + V-ing)
NeedMain Verb: need + to + V1, do-support for neg/question. Modal: need + bare V1, direct neg/question (needn't, Need I...?)
DareMain Verb: dare + to + V1, do-support for neg/question. Modal: dare + bare V1, direct neg/question (daren't, Dare I...?)
C. Perfect Modals (Modal + Have + V3)
StructureMeaning
Could have + V3Was possible/had ability in past but didn't do it; OR (negative) wasn't possible even if wanted; OR a guess about the past
Should have + V3Something didn't happen but we wish it had — regret/mistake
Would have + V3Imagined result if past had been different (3rd conditional); OR wanted to do something but didn't
May/Might have + V3Possibility that something happened in the past (uncertain)
Must have + V3Strong deduction/conclusion about a past event (near-certain)
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