1. Lesson Overview
In this lesson, you will learn how modal verbs are used to form questions, negative statements, and polite requests.
Modal verbs play an important role in everyday communication because they allow speakers to ask questions, make requests, offer help, or give permission in a polite and natural way.
Unlike most verbs, modal verbs do not require auxiliary verbs such as “do” to form questions or negatives.
By the end of this lesson, you will be able to:
-
form questions using modal verbs
-
form negative sentences with modal verbs
-
make polite requests and offers using modal structures
-
distinguish between formal and informal modal requests
2. Concept Introduction
Consider the following sentences:
Can you explain the results?
Could you help me with this problem?
Both sentences request assistance, but they differ slightly in tone and politeness.
| Sentence | Meaning |
|---|---|
| Can you explain the results? | request (informal) |
| Could you help me? | more polite request |
Another example:
May I ask a question?
This structure expresses a formal request for permission.
3. Core Explanation
Modal verbs form questions and negatives directly, without the auxiliary verb do.
Basic Pattern
| Structure | Example |
|---|---|
| modal + subject + base verb | Can she analyse the data? |
Example:
Could you review this report?
Modal verbs are also commonly used to make polite requests, offers, and invitations.
Example:
Would you like some assistance?
4. Rule Table
Questions with Modal Verbs
| Structure | Example |
|---|---|
| modal + subject + base verb | Can you solve the problem? |
Examples:
May I ask a question?
Could you review the report?
Negative Forms
| Structure | Example |
|---|---|
| subject + modal + not + base verb | She cannot attend the meeting. |
Common contractions:
| Full Form | Contraction |
|---|---|
| cannot | can’t |
| could not | couldn’t |
| should not | shouldn’t |
| would not | wouldn’t |
| must not | mustn’t |
Example:
She can’t attend the conference today.
Polite Requests
| Structure | Example |
|---|---|
| Can you + verb | Can you help me? |
| Could you + verb | Could you explain the results? |
| Would you + verb | Would you send the report? |
| May I + verb | May I ask a question? |
5. Usage
1. Informal requests (can)
Example:
Can you check this calculation?
2. Polite requests (could)
Example:
Could you review this document?
3. Formal requests (may)
Example:
May I enter the laboratory?
4. Offers and invitations (would)
Example:
Would you like some assistance?
5. Asking for permission
Example:
May I leave early today?
6. Signal Words
Polite modal requests often appear with expressions that soften the request.
| Expression | Example |
|---|---|
| please | Could you help me, please? |
| kindly | Would you kindly review the report? |
| possibly | Could you possibly explain this result? |
| perhaps | Could you perhaps check the data again? |
| if you don’t mind | Could you review this document, if you don’t mind? |
These expressions help make requests more courteous and indirect.
7. Special Cases
Formal vs Informal Requests
| Structure | Level of Formality |
|---|---|
| Can you… | informal |
| Could you… | polite |
| Would you… | very polite |
| May I… | formal |
Example:
Can you send the report? (informal)
Could you send the report? (polite)
Would you send the report? (very polite)
Modal Questions Without “Do”
Modal verbs do not use auxiliary “do” in questions.
Incorrect:
Do you can solve the problem?
Correct:
Can you solve the problem?
8. Additional Notes
In professional and academic environments, modal verbs are frequently used to make requests more polite and indirect.
Example:
Could you provide additional information about the results?
Using modal verbs helps avoid sounding too direct or demanding.
9. Common Errors
⚠ Using “do” with modal verbs
Incorrect:
Do you can solve the problem?
Correct:
Can you solve the problem?
Explanation:
Modal verbs form questions without “do.”
⚠ Incorrect verb form
Incorrect:
Could you explaining the results?
Correct:
Could you explain the results?
Explanation:
The verb after a modal must be in the base form.
⚠ Incorrect negative structure
Incorrect:
She doesn’t can attend the meeting.
Correct:
She cannot attend the meeting.
Explanation:
Negatives use modal + not.
⚠ Incorrect request structure
Incorrect:
May you help me with this problem?
Correct:
May I ask for your help?
Explanation:
May is typically used for permission, not requests to others.
⚠ Adding “to” after modal
Incorrect:
Could you to review this document?
Correct:
Could you review this document?
Explanation:
Modal verbs are followed by the base verb.
10. Lesson Mastery
After completing this lesson, you should now be able to:
✅ form questions using modal verbs correctly
✅ form negative modal sentences
✅ use modal verbs to make polite requests and offers
✅ distinguish between formal and informal modal expressions