Subject Exercises : 1. Modals Exercises 2. Can vs Be Able To With Tenses 3. We can use can and be able to to talk about general ability in the present. She’ s able to speak five languages.
She can speak five languages.
My son could walk when he was months old. My mother play the piano very well. Fortunately, he open the door before the car fell into the sea. She was an excellent player.
They had a spare key so they start the car. At five she read very well. I was near the stage. I see and hear very well.
You can do this grammar quiz online or print it on paper. It tests what you learned on the can, could, be able to page. It was awful, not being able to see you for so long. Since he left, none of the other team members have been able to match his enthusiasm.
We might have been able to move some of the staff to a different department. Underline the correct words. She’s years old but she can’t read yet – her parents are getting her extra lessons.
James could speak Japanese when he lived in Japan, but he’s forgotten most of it now. Could vs Be able to Exercise to practice the difference between could (past abilities) and be able to (manage to do something).
Students get instant feedback at the click of a button: a grade for each exercise and tips about wrong answers. Visit our Student Site today. Chennai can be very warm in summer.
I could see the teacher well from my seat yesterday. One day, I will be able to afford a home and a car. I couldn’t have won so I didn’t go in for the race. I might be able to come.
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. Review modal verbs of ability here Download this quiz in PDF here.
See all modal verbs exercises here. Need more practice? Get more Perfect English Grammar with our courses. Welcome to Perfect English Grammar!
May is much less common than can in both granting and refusing permission orally, as it is more formal. May not, in particular, sm.
Hiç yorum yok:
Yorum Gönder
Not: Yalnızca bu blogun üyesi yorum gönderebilir.