Module code: 914

📚 Guessing Games: How to Talk About Possibilities in English A2

🎯 8 grammar forms💬 27 examples⏱️ 3-4 minutes

📖 Story Summary

When you're not sure about something, English has special words to help you guess. Your friend isn't answering her phone – where is she? You can say 'She may be at work' or 'She might be sleeping.' These are modal verbs for speculation. But be careful! 'Maybe' (one word) and 'may be' (two words) sound the same but work differently. 'Maybe' starts a sentence like an adverb: 'Maybe she's at home.' But 'may be' comes after the subject: 'She may be at home.' For the past, the structure changes. If your friend didn't come to the party yesterday, you can guess: 'She may have been sick' or 'She might have been working.' These small words help you sound natural when you don't know something for certain.

🎯 Grammar Showcase

may be (modal + be for present speculation)

Used to guess about present situations when you're not certain

“She may be at work.”

→ guessing about present location

“He may be tired.”

→ speculating about present state

“It may be broken.”

→ guessing about present condition

might be (modal + be for present speculation)

Interchangeable with 'may be' – same level of uncertainty

“She might be sleeping.”

→ guessing about present activity

“They might be busy.”

→ speculating about present state

“That person might be going to work.”

→ guessing about present action

could be (modal + be for present speculation)

Also interchangeable with may/might be for guessing

“She could be in a meeting.”

→ guessing about present location

“The weather could be changing.”

→ speculating about present action

“It could be true.”

→ guessing about present reality

maybe vs may be (adverb vs modal verb)

Critical contrast: one word adverb vs two-word verb phrase

Maybe she's at home.”

→ adverb starting the sentence

“She may be at home.”

→ modal verb after subject

Perhaps he's late.”

→ adverb like 'maybe'

may have been (modal + have been for past speculation)

Used to guess about past situations

“She may have been sick.”

→ guessing about past state

“He may have been working.”

→ speculating about past continuous action

“The shop may have been closed yesterday.”

→ guessing about past situation

might have been (modal + have been for past speculation)

Interchangeable with 'may have been' for past guesses

“She might have been tired.”

→ guessing about past state

“They might have been sleeping.”

→ speculating about past continuous action

“That car might have been expensive.”

→ guessing about past characteristic

must be vs may be (deduction vs speculation)

Different meaning: 'must be' shows certainty, 'may be' shows uncertainty

“She must be at home.”

→ deduction (almost certain)

“She may be at home.”

→ speculation (not sure)

continuous forms with modals (modal + be + verb-ing)

Shows speculation about actions in progress

“She might be working.”

→ guessing about present action in progress

“He could be driving.”

→ speculating about ongoing present action

“They may be eating dinner.”

→ guessing about current activity

“Someone may be cooking dinner nearby.”

→ speculating about action happening now

💡 Study Tip

Practice by making three guesses about things around you right now using may be, might be, and could be, then try the same with past situations using may have been and might have been.

Grammar Practice: Guessing Games: How to Talk About Possibilities in English

Test your understanding of the grammar forms from the story.

may be

Which sentence uses 'may be' correctly to guess about a present situation?

may be

In the sentence 'He may be tired,' what does 'may be' express?

might be

Which sentence correctly uses 'might be' with a continuous form to guess about a present activity?

might be

Which sentence contains an error?

could be

Which sentence uses 'could be' correctly for present speculation?

could be

In the sentence 'The weather could be changing,' what does 'could be changing' express?

maybe vs may be

Which sentence correctly uses 'maybe' (one word) as an adverb?

maybe vs may be

Which sentence contains an error in using maybe/may be?

may have been

Which sentence correctly uses 'may have been' to guess about a past situation?

may have been

In the sentence 'He may have been working,' what does 'may have been working' express?

might have been

Which sentence uses 'might have been' correctly for past speculation?

might have been

Which sentence contains an error?

must be vs may be

What is the difference between 'She must be at home' and 'She may be at home'?

continuous with modals

Which sentence correctly uses a modal with continuous form to guess about an action in progress?

continuous with modals

Complete the sentence: 'They ____ eating dinner right now.'

← Previous Page 2 of 1 Next (Coming Soon) →