Should is a modal verb, should not is the negative form.
Yes, it is. Also there are other modal verbs like : Will ,Would, Could, Shall ,Should etc..
Can is; a noun: Put the worms in the can and lets go to the lake. a modal auxiliary verb: I can type very fast. a transitive verb: We want to can all those tomatoes tonight.
Modal auxiliaries express necessity, possibility, permission, ability, or obligation in a sentence. Examples include "can" (ability), "must" (necessity), and "may" (permission). They help convey the speaker's attitude toward the action of the main verb, indicating how likely or required an event is to occur.
verb.
Yes, an action verb.
does is not a modal verb
yes, it is a modal verb.
No. Modal is an adjective and not a verb so nobody can modal anything.
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.
Shall is a modal verb (also called auxiliary or helper verb). Modal verbs are used with a main verb to qualify the main verb in time or mood. The modal and the main verb join to form a 'verb phrase' and the entire 'verb phrase' acts as the verb. Example sentences:Yes, I shall have a piece of that pie.Yes, I will have a piece of that pie.Yes, I may have a piece of that pie.Yes, I can have a piece of that pie.Yes, I should have a piece of that pie.
Yes. It's a helping verb, also known as a modal auxiliary.
Ought is a modal auxiliary verb. The "to" is part of an infinitive (to + base form of a verb). ought to go ought to have ought to see
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.
"You will" is a verb phrase consisting of the modal verb "will" and the pronoun "you."
will smell is a verb phrase.will is a modal verbsmell is a main verb