Can Is An Auxiliary Verb, A Modal Auxiliary Verb. We Use Can To
Can Is An Auxiliary Verb, A Modal Auxiliary Verb. We Use Can To
Can Is An Auxiliary Verb, A Modal Auxiliary Verb. We Use Can To
can and could are modal auxiliary verbs. be able to is NOT an auxiliary verb (it uses the verb be as
a main verb). We include be able to here for convenience.
In this lesson we look at can, could and be able to, followed by a quiz to check your understanding.
can
Structure of can
can't
Notice that:
Use of can
We use can to talk about what is possible, what we are able or free to do:
She can drive a car.
John can speak Spanish.
I cannot hear you. (I can't hear you.)
Can you hear me?
Normally, we use can for the present. But it is possible to use can when we make present decisions
about future ability.
We often use can in a question to ask somebody to do something. This is not a real question - we do
not really want to know if the person is able to do something, we want them to do it! The use
of can in this way is informal (mainly between friends and family):
(Note that we also use could, may, might for permission. The use of can for permission is
informal.)
could
couldn't
Notice that:
Use of could
We use could to talk about what was possible in the past, what we were able or free to do:
past
could for requests
We often use could in a question to ask somebody to do something. The use of could in this way is
fairly polite (formal):
be able to
Although we look at be able to here, it is not a modal verb. It is simply the verb be plus an
adjective (able) followed by the infinitive. We look at be able to here because we sometimes use it
instead of can and could.
+ I am able to drive.
isn't
Be able to is NOT a modal auxiliary verb. We include it here for convenience, because it is often
used like "can" and "could", which aremodal auxiliary verbs.
We use be able to to express ability. "Able" is an adjective meaning: having the power, skill or
means to do something. If we say "I am able to swim", it is like saying "I can swim". We
sometimes use be able to instead of "can" or "could" for ability. Be able to is possible in all tenses -
but "can" is possible only in the present and "could" is possible only in the past for ability. In
addition, "can" and "could" have no infinitive form. So we use be able towhen we want to use other
tenses or the infinitive. Look at these examples: