1. Lesson Overview
In this lesson, you will learn how modal verbs can express different degrees of certainty and probability.
Modal verbs such as must, may, might, and could allow speakers to indicate how certain they are about a situation or conclusion. These forms are commonly used when making logical deductions, predictions, or assumptions based on available information.
Understanding these modal verbs helps learners express uncertainty, possibility, or strong belief in a precise way.
By the end of this lesson, you will be able to:
-
recognise how modal verbs express different levels of certainty
-
use must to express strong logical deduction
-
use may, might, and could to express possibility
-
understand how modal verbs are used in predictions and conclusions
2. Concept Introduction
Consider the following sentences:
The lights are off. She must be asleep.
She might be studying in the library.
| Sentence | Meaning |
|---|---|
| must be asleep | strong logical conclusion |
| might be studying | possible but uncertain |
Another example:
The system could fail under extreme pressure.
Here, the modal verb could indicates possibility, but not certainty.
3. Core Explanation
Modal verbs expressing certainty and probability help speakers show how confident they are about a statement.
| Modal Verb | Degree of Certainty |
|---|---|
| must | strong certainty or logical deduction |
| may | moderate possibility |
| might | weaker possibility |
| could | possible outcome |
Example:
The experiment must have succeeded.
The speaker believes this strongly based on evidence.
Example:
The results might change after further analysis.
This sentence expresses uncertainty.
4. Rule Table
Basic Modal Structure
| Structure | Example |
|---|---|
| subject + modal + base verb | She may attend the conference. |
Modal + Be (Present Deduction)
| Structure | Example |
|---|---|
| subject + modal + be + complement | She must be tired. |
Example:
The device may be defective.
Modal + Have (Past Deduction)
| Structure | Example |
|---|---|
| subject + modal + have + past participle | She must have finished the report. |
Example:
The system might have failed during the test.
5. Usage
1. Strong logical deduction (must)
Example:
The laboratory is closed. The researchers must have left.
2. Moderate probability (may)
Example:
The results may improve after further analysis.
3. Weak possibility (might)
Example:
The experiment might produce unexpected results.
4. Possible outcome (could)
Example:
The new technology could change the industry.
5. Predictions based on evidence
Example:
The clouds are dark. It might rain soon.
6. Signal Words
Modal verbs expressing probability often appear with expressions indicating uncertainty.
| Expression | Example |
|---|---|
| perhaps | Perhaps the results will change. |
| maybe | Maybe the system will fail. |
| probably | The experiment will probably succeed. |
| possibly | The device could possibly malfunction. |
| likely | The method is likely to improve efficiency. |
| unlikely | The experiment is unlikely to fail. |
These expressions help indicate degrees of certainty or uncertainty.
7. Special Cases
Must vs May / Might
| Modal | Meaning |
|---|---|
| must | strong logical conclusion |
| may / might | possibility |
Example:
She must be in the laboratory.
(strong belief)
She might be in the laboratory.
(possible but uncertain)
Past Logical Deduction
When referring to past events, modal verbs are often followed by have + past participle.
Example:
The researchers must have completed the analysis.
Example:
The system might have failed during the experiment.
8. Additional Notes
In academic and scientific writing, modal verbs expressing probability are commonly used to present cautious conclusions.
Example:
These findings may indicate a change in environmental conditions.
This structure avoids making overly strong claims and reflects scientific caution.
9. Common Errors
⚠ Incorrect verb form after modal
Incorrect:
She might studies the results.
Correct:
She might study the results.
Explanation:
The verb after a modal must remain in the base form.
⚠ Adding “to” after modal
Incorrect:
She may to attend the conference.
Correct:
She may attend the conference.
Explanation:
Modal verbs are followed by the base verb without “to.”
⚠ Confusing certainty levels
Incorrect:
The results must possibly change.
Better:
The results may change.
Explanation:
Must expresses strong certainty, not possibility.
⚠ Incorrect past deduction structure
Incorrect:
She must finished the report.
Correct:
She must have finished the report.
Explanation:
Past deductions require modal + have + past participle.
⚠ Incorrect negative structure
Incorrect:
She doesn’t might attend the meeting.
Correct:
She might not attend the meeting.
Explanation:
Negatives use modal + not.
10. Lesson Mastery
After completing this lesson, you should now be able to:
✅ recognise how modal verbs express different levels of certainty
✅ use must for strong logical deductions
✅ use may, might, and could for different degrees of possibility
✅ understand how modal verbs are used in predictions and conclusions