A Brief note on Will,Would,Shall,Should,Can,Could,Used to.
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hi there
will :
Expressing the future tense.
‘you will regret it when you are older’
would :
(expressing the conditional mood) indicating the consequence of an imagined event or situation.
‘he would lose his job if he were identified’
Shall:
(in the first person) expressing the future tense.
‘this time next week I shall be in Scotland’
Should:
Used to indicate obligation, duty, or correctness, typically when criticizing someone's actions.
‘he should have been careful’
‘I think we should trust our people more’
can:
Be able to.
‘they can run fast’
‘I could hear footsteps’
‘he can't afford it’
could:
Used to indicate possibility.
‘they could be right’
‘I would go if I could afford it’
used to:
Having previously been a particular thing; former.
‘now I have baggy skin around a used-to-be toned stomach’
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will :
Expressing the future tense.
‘you will regret it when you are older’
would :
(expressing the conditional mood) indicating the consequence of an imagined event or situation.
‘he would lose his job if he were identified’
Shall:
(in the first person) expressing the future tense.
‘this time next week I shall be in Scotland’
Should:
Used to indicate obligation, duty, or correctness, typically when criticizing someone's actions.
‘he should have been careful’
‘I think we should trust our people more’
can:
Be able to.
‘they can run fast’
‘I could hear footsteps’
‘he can't afford it’
could:
Used to indicate possibility.
‘they could be right’
‘I would go if I could afford it’
used to:
Having previously been a particular thing; former.
‘now I have baggy skin around a used-to-be toned stomach’
________________
THANKS
please mark as a brainliest answer
Answered by
4
☆☆☆☆☆hii mate ☆☆☆☆☆
HERE IS YOUR ANSWER ⤵ ⤵ ⤵ ⤵
1.will
Well, in traditional British grammar, the rule is that will should only be used with second and third person pronouns (you; he, she, it, they).
2. would
If you are writing about past events, you can use it to indicate something that was in the future at that point in time, but is not necessarily in the future right now. In other words, you use would to preserve the future aspect when talking about the past. ⇒ This is the same as: She said, "I will visityou".
3.shall
Well, in traditional British grammar, the rule is that will should only be used with second and third person pronouns (you; he, she, it, they). With first person pronouns (I and we), the 'correct' verb to talk about the future is shall.
4.should
Should" is a modal verb most commonly used to make recommendations or give advice. It can also be used to express obligation as well as expectation.
5.can
We use can to talk about someone's skill or general abilities: She can speak several languages. We use can to talk about the ability to do something at a given time in the present or future
6.could
Could" is a modal verb used to express possibility or past ability as well as to make suggestions and requests. "Could" is also commonly used in conditional sentences as the conditional form of "can." Examples: Extreme rain could cause the river to flood the city.
7.used to
Use to + verb is a regular verb and means something that happened but doesn't happen any more. It uses -ed to show past tense. But since it always means something that happened in the past, it should always use past tense. For example- I used to go to school in Paris.
may it help me
HERE IS YOUR ANSWER ⤵ ⤵ ⤵ ⤵
1.will
Well, in traditional British grammar, the rule is that will should only be used with second and third person pronouns (you; he, she, it, they).
2. would
If you are writing about past events, you can use it to indicate something that was in the future at that point in time, but is not necessarily in the future right now. In other words, you use would to preserve the future aspect when talking about the past. ⇒ This is the same as: She said, "I will visityou".
3.shall
Well, in traditional British grammar, the rule is that will should only be used with second and third person pronouns (you; he, she, it, they). With first person pronouns (I and we), the 'correct' verb to talk about the future is shall.
4.should
Should" is a modal verb most commonly used to make recommendations or give advice. It can also be used to express obligation as well as expectation.
5.can
We use can to talk about someone's skill or general abilities: She can speak several languages. We use can to talk about the ability to do something at a given time in the present or future
6.could
Could" is a modal verb used to express possibility or past ability as well as to make suggestions and requests. "Could" is also commonly used in conditional sentences as the conditional form of "can." Examples: Extreme rain could cause the river to flood the city.
7.used to
Use to + verb is a regular verb and means something that happened but doesn't happen any more. It uses -ed to show past tense. But since it always means something that happened in the past, it should always use past tense. For example- I used to go to school in Paris.
may it help me
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