It may have been Pam who forgot to lock the door

neb090

Member
Joined
Jun 14, 2022
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Student or Learner
Native Language
Chinese
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Taiwan
Current Location
Taiwan
1. It may have been Pam who forgot to lock the door. She was the last one to leave the classroom yesterday.
2. It could have been Pam who forgot to lock the door. She was the last one to leave the classroom yesterday.
3. It might have been Pam who forgot to lock the door. She was the last one to leave the classroom yesterday.

In the above three sentences, is the possibility from low to high: could > may > might?
 
1. It may have been Pam who forgot to lock the door. She was the last one to leave the classroom yesterday.
2. It could have been Pam who forgot to lock the door. She was the last one to leave the classroom yesterday.
3. It might have been Pam who forgot to lock the door. She was the last one to leave the classroom yesterday.

In the above three sentences, is the possibility from low to high: could > may > might?
No. They all express roughly the same level of uncertainty (less than 100%). Learners often try to attach levels of possibility to these words. Don't waste your time on it.
 
neb,090, yet again, you have failed to state the source of the original context.

Without this, it looks like you're asking for help with your homework.
 
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