Ir al contenido principal

Use of Will, May and Might: B1: intermediate:


 

Use of Will/ Might/ May:


"Will," "might," and "may" are all used in different ways to express possibility, certainty, or requests: 


  • Will 
    Used to express certainty about something in the future. For example, "It will be hot next week". 




  • Might 
    Used to express uncertainty about something in the present or future. For example, "I might see you tomorrow". 




  • May 
    Used to express possibility in the present tense, or to make a request in a formal way. For example, "She may join us for dinner" or "May I have your attention?". 




"May" is more formal than "might" or "could". You can also add "well" after a modal verb to make a situation sound more likely. For example, "She may well have to rethink her plan". 



We use may:

  • when we are not sure about something in the present or future:

Jack may be coming to see us tomorrow.
               (= Perhaps Jack will come to see us tomorrow.)


Oh dear! It's half past ten. We may be late for the meeting.
               (= Perhaps we will be late for the meeting.)


She's had no sleep. She may be tired.
               (= Perhaps she is tired.)


  • to ask for permission in a formal way:

May I borrow the car tomorrow?
May we come a bit later?


  • to give permission in a formal way:

You may go now.
You 
may come at eleven if you wish.


  • to say that someone has permission 
  • in a formal way:

Students may travel for free.


We can use may not to refuse permission or to say that someone does not have permission, but it is formal and emphatic:


You may not borrow the car until you can be more careful with it!


Students may not wear jeans.


We use might when we are not sure about something in the present or future:


might see you tomorrow.


It looks nice, but it 
might be very expensive.


It's quite bright. It 
might not rain today.



We use may have and might have to make guesses about the past:

I haven't received your letter. It may have got lost in the post.
It's ten o'clock. They 
might have arrived by now.

We also use might:

He asked if he might borrow the car.
They wanted to know if they 
might come later.

  • as a very polite way of asking for permission:

Might we ask you a question?
Might I just interrupt for a moment?



Questions and negatives


We make questions by putting the subject after may/might:


May I …?     Might I …?

The negative forms are may not and might not.


Grammar: 


https://learnenglish.britishcouncil.org/grammar/english-grammar-reference/may-might. 📚✏️

Comentarios

Entradas populares de este blog

Verb to be.

  The verb to be: The verb  to be is one of the most common verbs in the english language. *The form of the verb to be: *When? Who? Form: *Base form: the base form of the verb be can be simple. *Simple present: First person singular:       I am. Second person singular:  You are. Third person singular:  He/She/It is. First person plural:  We are. Second person Plural: You are. Third person plural: They are. Examples: 1-  I am here. 2- you are a  Doctor. 3- He/She/It is Dominican. 4- We are playing tennis. 5- You are dancing merengue. 6- They are at the park. Exercise grammar: Complete the sentences using the verb to be. ( Simple present Form): 1-  I-----------  a doctor. 2-  you----------Dominican. 3-   He/She/It/-----------Here. 4-   We------------Dancing merengue. 5-  You----------- at the park. 6- They-----------seven people. *Q and A session. *Send a video of youtube with the topic of verb ...

am, is and are.

The Words Am, Is and Are, are the simple present form of the verb to be. 1-Use am with the Pronoun I 2-Use is with The singular nouns like My dad and the teacher, and with the pronoun he, she and it. 3-Use are with Plural nouns like My  Parents and Jenny and Mary, and with the Pronouns We, You and they. Examples: Singular: I am twelve. I am in the garden. My mom is very tired today. The teacher is tall. She is also pretty. Plural: The children are asleep. Computers are very expensive . My brother and I are upstairs. We are at the beach. You are my best friend . You and annie are my sisters. Here is a table to help you remember how to use Is, am and are.                                Singular                plural First person:           I am                     We are Seco...

conjugated simple present verbs. Diana beginners.

 Semana del martes 11-Sábado 15 de febrero: 1- TO TALK: Hablar. I talk You talk He/She/ It talks We talk You talk They talk 2- TO BE: ser o estar. I am  You are He/She/it is We are You are  They are  3-TO DANCE: Bailar. I dance You dance He/She/ it dances We dance You dance They dance 4-TO RUN: correr. I run You run He/She/ it runs  We run You run They run 5- TO JUMP: saltar I jump  You jump He/She/it jumps We jump You jump They jump 6-TO SING: cantar. I sing You sing He/She/it sings We sing You sing They sing 7- TO TEACH: enseñar un tema X I teach You teach He/She/it teaches We teach You teach They teach  8-To SPEAK: hablar. I speak You speak He/She/it speaks We speak You speak They speak 9-TO MOVE: mover  I move  You move  He/She/ it moves  We move You move They move  10-TO WALK: caminar  I walk  You walk  He/She/it walks We walk You walk They walk  11-TO SMILE: sonreír. I smile  You smile He/she it s...