Modals - (to) infinitive/ -ing form
Quiz by Rosita Meiluvienė
Feel free to use or edit a copy
includes Teacher and Student dashboards
Measure skillsfrom any curriculum
Measure skills
from any curriculum
Tag the questions with any skills you have. Your dashboard will track each student's mastery of each skill.
With a free account, teachers can
- edit the questions
- save a copy for later
- start a class game
- automatically assign follow-up activities based on students’ scores
- assign as homework
- share a link with colleagues
- print as a bubble sheet
12 questions
Show answers
- Q1Modal verbs express:speaker's attitude.an action.30s
- Q2Modalsdon't take -s; -ing or ed.-s; ing; ed can be added to the modals in certain cases.30s
- Q3Modals (except for ought to) are followed by the base infinitive.That's right.No.30s
- Q4"Have to" means:obliged.allowed.30s
- Q5"May/ could" in questions mean:possibleis it OK if...30s
- Q6"Mustn't/ haven't" mean:it's a good idea not to do sth.aren't allowed.30s
- Q7We use the verb with -ing suffix when it is used as a noun in a sentence.No.That's right.30s
- Q8Do we use the following verb with -ing after the following verbs: admit; appreciate; imagine; suggest?No, we don't.Yes, we do.30s
- Q9Do we use "to infinitive" after: would like, would prefer; would love?No, we don't.Yes, we do.30s
- Q10Do we use the verb with -ing suffix after "too/ enough"?No, we don't.Yes, we do.30s
- Q11Do we use "to infinitive" after: appear, decide, hope, plan?Yes, we do.No, we don't.30s
- Q12In the sentence: "Daphne is upstairs; she must be playing on her computer". "Must" expresses:that the subject of the sentence is obliged to carry out the action.that the speaker is certain about the action taking places.30s