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No might haveis a verb phrase. In this phrase:Mightis a modal auxiliary verbHaveis a main verb
No.The b verbs are - am is are was were being been.Must is a modal auxiliary verb.
Yes, it is called a "modal" verb. Might, must, could, would, and should are modal verbs too. (Modal verbs are often used to show permission or obligation or possibility.) Examples: You must go to the principal's office. She might get an "A" in History class. I may be late for class.
Can is a is a quintessential of auxiliary verbwhich is also known as modal and has the ability to change the meaning of a verb.in different ways.
No. The word "should" is a verb. It is the past tense of the helper verb shall (will), used in the same manner as can/could or will/would. It indicates an action that one has a good reason to perform, or one that has a likely result.
does is not a modal verb
Should is a modal verb, should not is the negative form.
A modal is a type of auxiliary verb which is used to express the certainty of following verb. For example 'You must go to bed by 10pm', 'You will find it under the sink', 'You might hurt yourself if you do that'. In these case the modals must, will, might, express the certainty of the verbs go, find and hurt.
yes, it is a modal verb.
No. Modal is an adjective and not a verb so nobody can modal anything.
No, the word 'should' is a modal verb, an auxiliary verb that expresses the necessity or the possibility of a main verb.A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence.Example: Max should finish mowing the lawn before he goes to the mall.The modal verb 'should' indicates the necessity of the verb 'finish'.The pronoun 'he' takes the place of the noun 'Max' in the second part of the sentence.
No, "should" is not an irregular verb. It follows a regular pattern in conjugation, with "should" being the base form, "should" as the past form, and "should" as the past participle form.
yes. 'will' is a modal verb. A modal is an helping or auxiliary verb which does not change its form irrespective of the subject noun being in whatever person or number.
Yes. It's a helping verb, also known as a modal auxiliary.
No, it is not. It is a helper verb (modal verb), used to indicate ability.
Yes, it's a modal verb.
The word "can" is a verb. The infinitive is "to be able to", it is a modal verb.