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Vídeo explicativo del Reported Speech
Hello everyone. I hope you are doing well. I really miss you. We are going to talk today
00:00:00
about morals. Do you remember morals? Here you'll find the list.
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Morals are verbs that we don't conjugate them. They don't use the S in the third person
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of singular. They always go with an infinitive without to and they make the question by inversion.
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So I say, I can't jump very high. And I question, can you jump very high? Morals are used for
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asking for permission. May I come in please? They are used for expressing ability. You
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can speak many languages. We use it to give orders. You mustn't talk very loud here. We
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use it to make some advices. So give a piece of advice. You should study more. You should
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do some exercise. But today we are not talking about morals in general. We are talking about
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morals of speculation. First, let's gonna talk about morals of speculation in the present.
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We got three possibilities. When we think that something is likely to happen, so something
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can happen or not, there is a possibility that something happen. And we use may, could
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or might plus infinitive. May, might and could are synonyms. So we can use any of them. Like
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for example, he looks tired. He might be ill. Or he might be ill. Or he could be ill. We
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use might not or may not when we are not sure that something happened or not. But it probably
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doesn't happen. For example, I'm not sure if he is ill. He might not feel quite well.
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We use must plus infinitive when we are fairly sure that something happened. He doesn't call
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me. He doesn't call me very often. He must be angry with me. We use can't plus infinitive
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and couldn't plus infinitive when we are fairly sure that something doesn't happen. So the
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difference is must, we are sure something happened. Can't or couldn't, we are sure something
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doesn't happen. What if we are using these verbs of speculation in the past? It's the same. We
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use the same modal verbs but we add have or have not plus participle. For example, if we are sure
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that something happened in the past, we use must, have plus participle. For example, he didn't come
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to school today. He must have been very busy or he must be ill. We are sure that something didn't
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happen in the past. We say he is not very smart. He couldn't have passed the exam or he can't have
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passed the exam. When we are not sure that something happened or something didn't happen
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in the past, we use might, may or could plus have plus participle. Because remember may,
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might and could are synonyms in this context. Is that okay? That's all. If you got any doubt
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about what I have just explained, let me know by leaving a comment down or send it to my email or
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you know how to contact me. Cheers! Keep safe and sound, please!
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- Autor/es:
- Tomás Gaviro
- Subido por:
- Tomás G.
- Licencia:
- Dominio público
- Visualizaciones:
- 29
- Fecha:
- 21 de octubre de 2023 - 19:27
- Visibilidad:
- Público
- Centro:
- CPR INF-PRI-SEC LAS ROSAS
- Duración:
- 05′ 10″
- Relación de aspecto:
- 1.78:1
- Resolución:
- 1280x720 píxeles
- Tamaño:
- 29.79 MBytes