Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Dictionary
    Might
    /mīt/

    modal

    • 1. past of may
    • 2. used tentatively to ask permission or to express a polite request: "might I just ask one question?"
  2. 1 day ago · 1. modal verb. You use might to indicate that something will possibly happen or be true in the future, but you cannot be certain. [vagueness] There's a report today that smoking might be banned in most buildings. I might well regret it later. 2. modal verb.

  3. noun. physical strength: He swung with all his might. superior power or strength; force: the theory that might makes right. power or ability to do or accomplish; capacity: the might of the ballot box. See more. Origin of might.

  4. power or ability to do or accomplish; capacity: the might of the ballot box. Idioms with might and main, with all the vigor, force, or energy at one's command: They pulled with might and main. bef. 900; Middle English myghte, Old English miht, meaht; cognate with German macht, Gothic mahts; akin to may1.

  5. UK /mʌɪt/ modal verb Word forms: (third singular present) might 1. past of may used in reported speech, to express possibility or permission he said he might be late expressing a possibility based on an unfulfilled condition we might have won if we'd played better expressing annoyance about something that someone has not done you might hav...

  6. MAY - MIGHT - English modal verbs - Grammar Lesson. Watch on. MAY & MIGHT. May and Might are modal verbs. They can normally be interchanged without a significant difference in meaning. I might go. I may go. May and Might more or less have the same meaning. (We will see more about this later)

  7. Sep 4, 2023 · Both may and might are modal auxiliary verbs expressing that something could happen or could have happened. The context in which each of these auxiliary, or helper, verbs should be used entirely depends on the main verbs they are modifying.

  8. Oct 4, 2023 · There are 12 meanings listed in OED's entry for the noun might, five of which are labelled obsolete. See ‘Meaning & use’ for definitions, usage, and quotation evidence.

  1. People also search for