Course Content
English Grammar Mastery: From Foundations to Fluency

1. Lesson Overview

In this lesson, you will learn what modal verbs are and how they function in English grammar. Modal verbs are auxiliary verbs that express meanings such as ability, possibility, permission, obligation, advice, and probability.

Unlike ordinary verbs, modal verbs do not describe actions directly. Instead, they modify the meaning of the main verb and express the speaker’s attitude, judgement, or degree of certainty.

Modal verbs are extremely common in English and appear frequently in both spoken and written communication.

By the end of this lesson, you will be able to:

  • recognise the main modal verbs in English

  • understand the basic structure of modal verb constructions

  • identify how modal verbs function in affirmative, negative, and interrogative sentences

  • recognise different meanings expressed by modal verbs


2. Concept Introduction

Consider the following sentences:

She solves the problem.
She can solve the problem.

Sentence Meaning
She solves the problem describes an action
She can solve the problem expresses ability

The modal verb can changes the meaning of the sentence by expressing ability.

Another example:

You must follow the safety instructions.

Here the modal verb must expresses obligation or necessity.


3. Core Explanation

Modal verbs are auxiliary verbs that appear before the main verb.

The most common modal verbs in English include:

  • can

  • could

  • may

  • might

  • must

  • shall

  • should

  • will

  • would

  • ought to

Modal verbs modify the meaning of the main verb by expressing ideas such as:

  • possibility

  • necessity

  • ability

  • permission

  • advice

  • probability

Example:

She may attend the conference.

The modal verb may indicates possibility.


4. Rule Table

Basic Modal Structure

Structure Example
subject + modal + base verb She can analyse the data.

Example:

The engineer can repair the system.


Negative Structure

Structure Example
subject + modal + not + base verb She cannot solve the problem.

Example:

You must not enter the laboratory without permission.


Interrogative Structure

Structure Example
modal + subject + base verb Can she solve the problem?

Example:

May I ask a question?


5. Usage

Modal verbs are used to express different types of meaning.

1. Ability

Example:

She can analyse complex data.


2. Permission

Example:

You may enter the laboratory.


3. Possibility

Example:

The experiment might fail under extreme conditions.


4. Obligation

Example:

Researchers must follow ethical guidelines.


5. Advice

Example:

You should check the calculations carefully.


6. Prediction

Example:

Technology will improve rapidly in the future.


6. Signal Words

Modal verbs are not usually identified by time expressions. Instead, they are recognised through context and meaning.

However, certain expressions often appear with modal verbs.

Expression Example
perhaps The results might change perhaps.
probably The system will probably fail under pressure.
maybe The experiment may succeed.
possibly The device could possibly malfunction.
certainly The method will certainly improve efficiency.

These words help indicate degree of certainty or possibility.


7. Special Cases

Modal Verbs Do Not Change Form

Modal verbs remain the same regardless of the subject.

Subject Example
I I can analyse the data.
She She can analyse the data.
They They can analyse the data.

Modal Verbs Are Followed by Base Verb

Incorrect:
She can analyses the data.

Correct:
She can analyse the data.

The verb after a modal remains in the base form.


8. Additional Notes

Modal verbs do not require auxiliary verbs such as “do” when forming questions or negatives.

Example:

Can she solve the problem?

Not:

Does she can solve the problem?

Modal verbs therefore function as auxiliary verbs themselves.


9. Common Errors

⚠ Adding “to” after a modal verb

Incorrect:
She can to analyse the data.

Correct:
She can analyse the data.

Explanation:
Modal verbs are followed by the base verb without “to.”


⚠ Adding third-person “-s”

Incorrect:
She cans solve the problem.

Correct:
She can solve the problem.

Explanation:
Modal verbs do not change form.


⚠ Incorrect question structure

Incorrect:
Does she can analyse the results?

Correct:
Can she analyse the results?

Explanation:
Modal verbs form questions without “do.”


⚠ Incorrect negative structure

Incorrect:
She doesn’t can solve the problem.

Correct:
She cannot solve the problem.

Explanation:
Negatives use modal + not.


⚠ Incorrect verb form after modal

Incorrect:
She can solving the problem.

Correct:
She can solve the problem.

Explanation:
The verb after a modal must be in the base form.


10. Lesson Mastery

After completing this lesson, you should now be able to:

✅ recognise the main modal verbs in English
✅ understand the basic structure of modal verb constructions
✅ form affirmative, negative, and interrogative modal sentences
✅ recognise different meanings expressed by modal verbs

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