30 de julio de 2013

Modal Verbs Exercises

Grammar Exercise - Modals


Do the exercise on modal verbs.

Circle the right modal verb
  1. There is plenty of tomatoes in the fridge. You shouldn't/couldn't buy any.
  2. It's a hospital. You can't/shall smoke.
  3. He had been working for more than 11 hours. He must/would be tired after such hard work. He prefer to get some rest.
  4.  I can/can't speak Arabic fluently when I was a child and we lived in Morocco. But after we moved back to Canada, I had very little exposure to the language and forgot almost everything I knew as a child. Now, I just say a few things in the language.
  5.  

    Modals Verbs

    Shades of Modality


    A modal verb (also modal, modal auxiliary verb, modal auxiliary) is a type of auxiliary verb that is used to indicate modality – that is, likelihood, ability, permission, and obligation.[1] Examples include the English verbs can/could, may/might, must, will/would, and shall/should.
    In English and other Germanic languages, modal verbs are often distinguished as a class based on certain grammatical properties.
    A modal auxiliary verb gives more information about the function of the main verb that it governs. Modals have a wide variety of communicative functions, but these functions can generally be related to a scale ranging from possibility ("may") to necessity ("must"), in terms of one of the following types of modality:
    • epistemic modality, concerned with the theoretical possibility of propositions being true or not true (including likelihood and certainty)
    • deontic modality, concerned with possibility and necessity in terms of freedom to act (including permission and duty)
    • dynamic modality,[2] which may be distinguished from deontic modality, in that with dynamic modality, the conditioning factors are internal – the subject's own ability or willingness to act[3]
    The following sentences illustrate epistemic and deontic uses of the English modal verb must:
    • epistemic: You must be starving. ("It is necessarily the case that you are starving.")
    • deontic: You must leave now. ("You are required to leave now.")
    An ambiguous case is You must speak Spanish. This may be intended epistemically ("It is surely the case that you speak Spanish", e.g. after having lived in Spain for a long time), or deontically ("It is a requirement that you speak Spanish", e.g. if you want to get a job in Spain).
    Epistemic modals can be analyzed as raising verbs, while deontic modals can be analyzed as control verbs.
    Epistemic usages of modals tend to develop from deontic usages.[4] For example, the inferred certainty sense of English must developed after the strong obligation sense; the probabilistic sense of should developed after the weak obligation sense; and the possibility senses of may and can developed later than the permission or ability sense. Two typical sequences of evolution of modal meanings are:
    • internal mental ability → internal ability → root possibility (internal or external ability) → permission and epistemic possibility
    • obligation → probability