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Interactive Grammar: Modals of Deduction

Use must, can't, could, might to express certainty and deduction about events.

Grammar Explanation · Authentic Examples · Practice Exercises

Lesson progressNot started
Duration
~45 min
Exercises
30
Level
Upper Intermediate

Overview

Use must, can't, could, might to express certainty and deduction about events.

Deduction Modals (Present)

  • mustmust be — logically certain: He must be tired.
  • can'tcan't be — logically impossible: It can't be right.
  • mightmight/could be — possible: She might be at home.

Past Deduction

  • must havemust have + pp — certain past: She must have left.
  • can't havecan't have + pp — impossible past: He can't have said that.
  • might havemight have + pp — possible past: They might have arrived.

Common Mistakes

  • ❌ He must be left → ✅ He must have left (past deduction)
  • ❌ She mustn't be home → ✅ She can't be home (impossibility)
  • Must he be tired? → ✅ Could he be tired? (question form)

When to use

Drawing Conclusions

You must be exhausted after that long flight.

Expressing Doubt

She might have missed the train.

Ruling Things Out

He can't be the thief — he was with me.

Past Deduction

The door was open — someone must have broken in.

Choose the Correct Deduction Modal

Select the modal that best expresses the logical deduction

Multiple Choice12 questions
1The lights are on — she be home.
2He just ran a marathon — he be exhausted.
3He's at work — it be him at the door.
4She be in her twenties — she looks very young.
5I'm not sure where they are — they be at the gym.
6The key fits — this be the right door.
7He looks confused — he understand.
8She have left already — her bag is still here.
9He didn't answer — he have been asleep.
10The footprints are fresh — someone have been here.
11She's only 12 — she drive.
12He knew all the answers — he have studied hard.

Fill in the Blanks

Complete each deduction using the correct modal form

Fill in the Blanks10 questions
1She knows everyone's name —(must)she work here for a long time.
2The door is locked —(can't)anyone be inside.
3He hasn't eaten all day —(must)he be hungry.
4She(might)have taken the early flight.
5It(can't)be true — I saw him here!
6They haven't replied —(could)they still be travelling.
7He(must)have been tired — he slept for twelve hours.
8The shop is closed —(might)they have changed their hours.
9She's fluent in Spanish —(must)she live in Spain for years.
10He scored 100% —(can't)he guess all the answers.

Fix the Errors

Rewrite each deduction with the modal mistake corrected

Error Fix8 questions

1He must be left — his coat is gone.

2She mustn't be at home — the lights are on.

3They can be tired — they drove all night.

4He can't have left — his bag is still there.

5She might not be the manager — she looks young.

6It must to be expensive — look at the label.

7He couldn't have did it alone.

8They mightn't have knew the way.

Frequently Asked Questions

What does this lesson on modals cover?

Use must, can't, could, might to express certainty and deduction about events.

Which CEFR level is this lesson designed for?

This lesson is designed for Upper Intermediate (B2) learners and forms part of the Modals section on Grammartier.

What is the best approach for studying this grammar topic?

Start with the definition, then study the examples carefully to understand how the pattern works in context. Practise identifying the structure in authentic sentences before producing your own — this recognition-first approach builds a strong foundation for accurate, confident use.

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