Modals: can, could, verb idiom “be able to” and managed to
-1-Can
Can is an auxiliary verb, a modal auxiliary verb. We use can to:
possibility and ability
Make requests
Ask for or give permission
Offer.
Structure of Can: subject + can + main verb.
The main verb is always the bare infinitive (infinitive without "to").
Use of Can:
-1- Ability and possibility
We use can to talk about what is possible, what we are able or free to do:
Mohamed can speak English. Ability
The weather can be fine today possibility
-2- Requests and Orders
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):
Can you make a cup of coffee, please? informal requests
Can you put the TV on? Order
-3- Asking and giving Permission and offer
A. Can I go out? Asking for permission
B. Can I help you? offer
-2- Be able to: “Be able to” is a verb idiom. It replaces can in tenses of the future, the past and the present perfect.
Structure of “be able to”: Subject + be + able + infinitive
Notice that be able to is possible in all tenses, for example:
I was able to drive...
I will be able to drive...
I have been able to drive...
Notice too that ”be able to” has an infinitive form:
I would like to be able to speak Chinese.
1
Use of be able to talk about:
Ability
We use “be able to” to express ability. 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 to" when we want to use other tenses or the
infinitive. Look at these examples:
I have been able to swim since I was five. (present perfect)
You will be able to speak perfect English very soon. (future simple)
I would like to be able to fly an airplane. (infinitive)
Use of: was/ were able to / managed to:
We tend to use was able to or managed to if we are talking about what happened in a particular situation or are
referring to a specific achievement:
Were you able to / did you manage to find a solution to him before he left home?
No, I'm sorry, I wasn't able to / didn't manage to convince him.
However, with verbs that refer to the five senses, see, hear, smell, feel, taste, and with verbs that refer to thought
processes, understand, believe, remember, decide, we normally use could, even when we are talking about specific
occasions:
-3- Could
Could is an auxiliary verb, a modal auxiliary verb. We use could to talk about:
past possibility or ability
make requests
Structure of could: subject + could + main verb
The main verb is always the bare infinitive (infinitive without "to").
Use of Could
-1- Could: Past Possibility or Ability
We use could to talk about what was possible in the past, what we were able or free to do:
I could swim when I was 5 years old. Ability
We were lucky because it could have rained but it didn't. Possibility
We use could (positive) and couldn't (negative) for general ability in the past.
-2- Could: 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):
Could you tell me where the bank is, please? Request
Could you send me a catalogue, please? Request