Modal Verbs | MUST WILL SHOULD MAY MIGHT COULD CAN'T WON'T

preview_player
Показать описание
📕Get my FREE book: English Quick Fix

🇬🇧 In this English grammar lesson you will learn the past and present modal verbs must, will, should, may, might, could, can't and won't. Use these modals to speculate and to talk about possibility or probability both in the present and the past tense, and both in the positive and negative forms.

====================================

Thanks for watching and bye for now!!

Greg 🇬🇧
Рекомендации по теме
Комментарии
Автор

m m m ... "He mightn´t have fallen from sky". You are super, Greg !

danielmazzoni
Автор

Simply, you're great teacher. Thank you.

mehmetberisha
Автор

Thank you Greg. God bless you. I'm from Egypt 🌹

yasserorabie
Автор

Mr. Greg, how's everything hope all good. I'm from Nigeria just want to let you know that you're one of my best turto online. I like the way you Teach, no all those grammar confusion you're just direct and I like that. Bravo!

heenaricciahmed
Автор

Oh my gosh!!! Thanks a lot about your great lesson my amazing teacher i would rather you kept teaching us what we don't know coz we do have a knowledge about English so i would rather you spoke about other mistakes we proper make when speaking

joelmasamba
Автор

Hi Greg, thanks a lot for your beautiful and useful videos

alessandrotorre
Автор

I like it so much the way of your pronunciation.its quite clear.thanks a lot to you.

dhanakondanareshnigam
Автор

Thanks teacher your teaching method is very simple & clear

lifeisgoodlg
Автор

Excellent explanation! XOXO's from Colombia!!

emiliamarquezjimenez
Автор

He could’ve collapsed, therefore he must’ve fell down on the road, losing his senses. He might’ve had some help from people walking along the road or people driving theirs cars, calling 999 to get an ambulance and help from medical staff. At the end, he must’ve been taken to the hospital and hopefully the gentleman might’ve recovered. Thank you!

rezaulshumon
Автор

He must have been very tired and thought it was a good place for a little nap😂😂

miguegiba
Автор

Hi Greg! He could've fainted.... May be, not sure... ( Bea from B.A.) Thanks a lot.

luisadigaudio
Автор

Hi Greg, your shirt goes well with the bleu of your eyes ! 😉Thanks for the video !

davidricciardella
Автор

he couldn’t have slipped on a stone, he may have passed out .
Thank you for your good lessons. I ‘m able to understand you very well

francoiseburette
Автор

Hello Greg !
Been watching your gallery of videos for quite some time now, and just saying I am more than pleased with them would be unfair. I must say that I have been able to understand a bunch of unclear things that I have been living with since college. This video about modals certainly brought me to light, thanks a lot. Nevertheless, I have a special favor to ask regarding modals, it is about those in past for speculation. I just hope I am not asking too much of you.

qmontoya
Автор

Hello Greg,
Only just come across you're videos which are great especially this one Will, must, should, might may etc.

My only suggestion is will doesn't really feature, may be you will do another video, where will, will feature?

Many thanks
Jane

janesharpe
Автор

plz make a video on syllables. it will help your students

NeetuSingh..
Автор

Hi Greg. Usually I don't accept this game with so-called homework. However, it's more foggy and gloomy than I have known about modal verbs and consequently used. So, here is my h/w; take a look, please. And also other virtual students, please. Every correction and short note is highly appreciated. So, someone sees a moveless man on the road and think:
1. It seems, he might have a stroke, it's so hot now.
2. I think he must have had a heart attack.
3. It looks for me this guy must have been hit by the car; it's quite typical hit and run scene.
THANK YOU!

slowlearner
Автор

Best for spoken, but little defficult to practice. You have to practice more and more.Greg

nassimchandani
Автор

interestingly the modal verb should is in polish powinien, and winien means guilty or obliged. guilty in German is schuldig, so it looks that the original meaning of should was "is obliged to" or better "owes to"and this is where "ought to" comes from.

maciejfratczak