Helping verbs are also called "auxiliary
verbs". |
Helping verbs have no meaning on their
own. They are necessary for the grammatical structure of a sentence, but they
do not tell us very much alone. We usually use helping verbs with main verbs.
They "help" the main verb (which has the real meaning). There are
only about 15 helping verbs in English, and we divide them into two basic
groups: |
Primary helping verbs (3 verbs) |
These are the verbs be, do,
and have. Note that we can use these three verbs as helping
verbs or as main verbs. On this page we talk about them as
helping verbs. We use them in the following cases: |
be |
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have |
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do |
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Modal helping verbs (10 verbs) |
We use modal helping verbs to
"modify" the meaning of the main verb in some way. A modal helping
verb expresses necessity or possibility, and changes the main verb in that
sense. These are the modal verbs: |
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Here are examples using modal verbs: |
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Semi-modal verbs (3 verbs) |
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