Lesson Page
Use this page as the visual reference. The interactive activities below explain and practice the same language.
Warm-up: Thinking about Regrets
Regret means feeling that a past action or decision was not the best choice. We often use should have + past participle to talk about it.
Activity 1 ยท Choose the best regret
Activity 2 ยท Identify the meaning
Grammar: Perfect Modals
Perfect modals are used to talk about feelings, beliefs, conclusions, regrets, and possibilities about past actions or events.
I should have studied medicine.
She shouldnโt have divorced Sam.
They might have been able to make a living as painters.
The museum could have closed.
To go broke in two months? You would have loved it.
Beth isnโt here. She must have gone home early.
Important form
Modal + have + past participle
Do not use the simple past after the modal.
Quick Check
Grammar Practice A
Choose the modal that logically completes each sentence. The verb is already included in the correct answer.
Grammar Practice B: Give Reasons
Choose the most logical reason using a perfect modal.
Pronunciation: Reduction of have
In perfect modals, have is often reduced in natural speech. It may sound like /ษv/ or combine with the modal: shouldโve, mightโve, couldโve.
Listen, then answer the pronunciation questions.
| Full form | Common reduced sound |
|---|---|
| I should have married Marie. | I shouldโve married Marie. |
| They might have left. | They mightโve left. |
| We may not have seen it. | We may notโve seen it. |
| She could have been on time. | She couldโve been on time. |
Pronunciation Check
Conversation Model
Listen to the conversation, then answer the questions.
Conversation Questions
Controlled Speaking Builder
Build short, correct answers. Choose one regret and one imagined result.
Regret sentence
Imagined result
Final Quiz: 5 Important Questions
Answer these key questions to review the lesson.
Youโve completed the second lesson. Wonderful!
Review the perfect modal patterns and practice saying the conversation aloud.