Dearly beloved
JTT: We are gathered here today to pass judgement on these sentences.
![Wink [;)]](/emoticons/emotion-5.gif)
But we shouldn't because it's homework.
I'm wondering about the following sentenceS:
1. Tom might burn his hands
also could and may
2. The parrot might not live very long
is also okay. could be too, with a different verb; "The parrot could die soon", where the meaning is virtually the same.
3. The bottle of wine might break into pieces
may and could are both okay.
4. The dog might bite Tom’s leg
may and could are both okay.
5. The glass might fall on the floor
may and could are both okay.
Vince:
In my class, I have to explain the difference between could, may, and might.
JTT: and express a a range of certainty. For beginners it's helpful to put it on a scale from 1 to 99.9%. Might and may occupy the lower range of the scale, might from 1 to ABOUT 25% and may ABOUT from 26 to 50%.
These numbers are not exact, of course, nor is the dividing line, but they do reflect and illustrate the difference between might and may, with might expressing a weaker degree of certainty than may.
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Vince:
In all sentences, you can also use may, but I'm not sure about could. Especially in numer 2: the parrot couldn't live very long. This changes the whole meaning of the sentence, doesn't it?
JTT: does NOT express to us a particular range of certainty. All says is "It is possible" and says "It's not possible". We can show a stronger or weaker with changes in intonation.
"That cooooould happen" illustrates a weaker while "That COULD happen" indicates a stronger one.
V: Could (not may/might) you help me, please?
JTT: "Might you help me?" is certainly possible here, Vince but it's not that common as it is REALLY deferential.