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Poll: He might have died in the accident.
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He might have died in the accident.

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  #11 (permalink)  
Old 06-Jul-2004, 04:24
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Default Re: May\might

hey this is a good Question

He might have died in the accident <-- after giving careful thoughts
this could implie he could be dead or alive

but also i think it depends on the situation

like for example, other info was given such as luckly his friend, who is a doctor was beside him or he might have died in the accident.
then in this situation he is still alive.

oh yeah by the way tdol you sure post really good polls
that can make me think hee hee :D
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  #12 (permalink)  
Old 06-Jul-2004, 04:24
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Default Re: May\might

hey this is a good Question

He might have died in the accident <-- after giving careful thoughts
this could implie he could be dead or alive

but also i think it depends on the situation

like for example, other info was given such as luckly his friend, who is a doctor was beside him or he might have died in the accident.
then in this situation he is still alive.

oh yeah by the way tdol you sure post really good polls
that can make me think hee hee :D
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  #13 (permalink)  
Old 06-Jul-2004, 23:34
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Default Re: May\might

Quote:
Originally Posted by gonghai
like for example, other info was given such as luckly his friend, who is a doctor was beside him or he might have died in the accident.
  • Luckliy, his friend, who is a doctor, was with him, or he might have died in the accident.

That is a good use of the phrase "might have", but I think I would say the person might have died because of (or: as a result of) the accident.

:)
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Old 06-Jul-2004, 23:34
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Default Re: May\might

Quote:
Originally Posted by gonghai
like for example, other info was given such as luckly his friend, who is a doctor was beside him or he might have died in the accident.
  • Luckliy, his friend, who is a doctor, was with him, or he might have died in the accident.

That is a good use of the phrase "might have", but I think I would say the person might have died because of (or: as a result of) the accident.

:)
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Old 13-Jul-2004, 05:39
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Old 18-Aug-2006, 02:18
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Default Re: May\might

He could have died.

This could/can mean two things [maybe more]

"It was a possibility, but it didn't happen"

OR

"There is a possiblity that he died but I don't know".


He might have died.

This could also mean two things [maybe more]

"We don't know what happened, but there is a SMALL possibility that he died"

OR

it can be used as an admonishment,

"How could you kids be so stupid as to try that stunt?" He might have died.

'may' can also be used in this fashion to admonish; "he may have died" but it is much less likely that either 'might' or 'could'.

In pure speculation, ie. when these modals are used as epistemic predictors [modals of certainty], when we use 'could', all we say is, "There's a possibility but my 'could', in and of itself, doesn't state how strong a possibility.

'Might', on the other hand, confines the range of possibility from a miniscule to a small chance that something happened, will happen, is happening now, or happens all the time.



++++++++++++++++++

Quote:
Originally Posted by Tdol View Post
In BE, the following would be used:
1- He might have died. (he survived an incident where there was a possiblility of dying)
2- He may have died. (we don't know whether he has died or not- he's missing up a mountain in a storm, say.)
However, the distinction is being eroded and many people now are using 'may' for the fisrt meaning.
That's what some believe but it's simply not how English works, Tdol. In a purely epistemic sense when modals are being used to describe differing levels of speaker certainty, the only difference between 'might' and 'may' is that 'might' shows a speaker who is less certain.

1- He might have died. (we don't know whether he has died or not- he's missing up a mountain in a storm, say.)

Lower level of certainty than 'may'.

2- He may have died. (we don't know whether he has died or not- he's missing up a mountain in a storm, say.)

A higher level of certainty than 'might'.

[An even higher level of certainty becomes, "He probably has died", and an even higher level, "He almost certainly has died" which under the right circumstances, could morph into "He must have died".]

This distinction that some feel is being eroded has actually never existed. The people who think that's the case are confusing epistemic modal meaning with deontic modal meaning.

As the old saying goes, you've gotta compare apples to apples.

Last edited by riverkid; 19-Aug-2006 at 21:09.
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Old 18-Aug-2006, 02:35
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Default Re: May\might

Here is the situation:

Two friends make it to the beach after their boat sinks. They notice that the third friend, Bill, is missing.

Oh no! where is Bill?

He might have drowned.
He could have drowned.
He may have drowned.

I don't see any difference here. There are situations where these modals separate more significant degrees of meaning, but in this case they all mean "possibly dead."
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Old 18-Aug-2006, 03:17
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Default Re: May\might

Quote:
Originally Posted by mykwyner View Post
Here is the situation:
Two friends make it to the beach after their boat sinks. They notice that the third friend, Bill, is missing.
Oh no! where is Bill?
He might have drowned.
He could have drowned.
He may have drowned.
I don't see any difference here. There are situations where these modals separate more significant degrees of meaning, but in this case they all mean "possibly dead."
You're right, mykwyner that in certain circumstances, many of these modals seem to state the same thing and in this case, "possibility" covers all three. But that doesn't change the core meaning of the modals. They still retain their meanings and 'may' and 'might' express ranges of certainty while 'could/can' do not.

"He probably drowned" & "He almost certainly drowned/He must have drowned" also state "possibly dead"; all three show even higher levels of certainty.

But you have to consider the pragmatics of the situation. What would the two friends use? I'll suggest that 'may' sounds too strong, too certain to entertain at the outset and IMHO, it wouldn't be the first choice. Nor would, "could have drowned" be a first choice.
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Old 04-Feb-2008, 23:57
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Default Re: May\might

I'm afraid I can't see the difference. I might have missed something or, perhaps, I could have missed something. What did the papers say? Nothing reported since the accident?
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