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What Was Probably True

Modal Verbs of Probability - Past

Modal verbs of probability express an opinion based on what a speaker knows about a situation at the moment of speaking. The following forms are used to speak about past situations.

Example:

They must have been aware that the product was substandard.

Jake must have been concerned about the order backlog.

John could have been in error about the order cost.

'Must' plus the perfect form (must have done) expresses the idea that you are almost 100% sure of your opinion about a given situation which took place in the past.

Subject + must + have + past participle + objects

Example:

Tim must have been using the optical scanner - reader.

Jake must have been concerned about the order backlog.

'Might' or 'could' plus the perfect form of the verb (could / might have done) expresses an opinion that you think was probably true at a past moment in time.

Subject + might / could + have + past participle + objects

Example:

John could have been in error about the order cost.

The supplier could have been in error.

'Can't' plus the perfect form of the verb (can't have done) expresses the idea that you are almost 100% sure that something was not true at a past moment in time. Note that the form is 'can't have done' NOT 'couldn't have done'.

Subject + can't + have + past participle + objects

Example:

The technical sheet can't have been printed before the order confirmation.

Annie cant have been informed about the new order cycle.

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