In this situation tradition says that "may" is used for the future and 'might" is used for the past. I might have been in X, (but I'm not telling you). I may go to X, (if I can get time off work).
The month of May might be better for our vacation this year. May might carry the fight!
The word might've is not actually in most dictionaries but has become quite common to use as an informal contractionof the words 'might have'. Both 'might' and 'have' are auxiliary verbs (the past tense or conditional form of 'may have').The contraction might've functions as a combined auxiliary verb.Example:We might have been late but we did show up.OR:We might've been late but we did show up.
Yes it is.
Grammatically, "Does the rain" is correct. Rain may represent many individual rain drops, which is why "Do rain drops" would be correct, however rain represents it as a whole, so "Does the rain" is the appropriate form.
It might have been possible to give an answer if there had been an equation with the question!
Either "You may have been there" or "You might have been there" could be correct, depending on the intended meaning. "You may have been there" does not state any conclusion about whether you were there or not, and this clause would normally be followed by another clause beginning with "but" or "nevertheless", indicating that whether you were there or not is not particularly relevant to the speaker/writer's main point, which is expressed in the second clause. "You might have been there" implies that you were not there and would usually be followed by another clause in which the principal verb will be in the subjunctive mood, often a clause beginning with "if", to explain why you were not there, even though it might have been expected or desired.
If it is used to mean "might be" or "could be" then it is correct.
No. The correct way to say it might be: You are born in May. Are you born in May? I am born in May. You were born on May 22.
"Might have been" and "may have been" are both used to suggest a possibility or likelihood of something happening in the past. The main difference is that "might have been" implies a lower degree of certainty compared to "may have been."
What Might Have Been - 1912 was released on: USA: 13 May 1912
correct may mean in accordance with what has already been proved quantitatively as fact, or it may be in concurrence with the truth, whether it be scientific or spiritual.
May 13th, 1987 i think. the year might not be correct.
Might, as in, 'It might have been rainy yesterday, I slept the whole time.'
Might is correct.
correct !
"Have been" is the correct phrase to use. "Have being" is not grammatically correct.
Helping verbs:amarebebeenbeingcancoulddiddodoeshadhashaveismaymightmustshallshouldwaswerewillwould