Overview
At C1 level, modal verbs carry subtle distinctions. 'Could' may signal ability, possibility, or polite request. 'Must' can show deduction or obligation. 'Would' appears in hypothesis, habit, and refusal. Understanding these nuances is essential for interpreting and producing precise formal English.
Fine Distinctions
- will/wouldwill = strong future intent · would = hypothetical / polite
- can/couldcan = current ability/permission · could = past ability, polite, or tentative
- may/mightmay = slightly more likely or formal · might = slightly less certain
- must/have tomust = internal conviction · have to = external obligation
Register and Politeness
- Most formal: May I · Formal: Could I · Neutral: Can I
- Tentative: I was wondering if I could… — backshifted for extra politeness
- Would softens requests: Would you mind…?
- Might hedges suggestions: You might want to consider…
Common Confusion Points
- ❌ I think you might consider this (over-hedged in formal advice) → ✅ You should consider
- Must (deduction) ≠ Must (obligation): context determines meaning.
- Could past ability vs was able to (specific achieved ability in past)
When to use
Professional emails
Could you send the revised report by Thursday morning?
Academic hedging
This finding might suggest a broader pattern.
Workplace advice
You may want to reconsider the proposed timeline.
Legal language
The parties must comply with the terms as stated.