2023-07-09 ศัพท์ น่าสับสน ชุด M - May & maybe & may be


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Dictionary.com

ออกเสียง May =MEY

ออกเสียง Maybe =MEY-bee

ออกเสียง Might = ‘MAHYT’

 

NECTEC’s Lexitron-2 Dictionary

ให้คำแปลMay = N พฤษภาคม Aux. สามารถจะ/อาจจะ

ให้คำแปลMaybe = Adv. อาจจะ/บางที

ให้คำแปลMight = N. อำนาจ/ความแข็งแรง

 

Dictionary of Problem Words and Expression

Maybe & may be

Maybe is an adverb meaning 

possibly,” 

perhaps”:

“Maybe it will snow tonight.”

 

so if you are uncertain 

whether to use this word or the phrase may be,”

try substituting “perhaps””

 

May be is a verb phrase

two words that express possibility or likelihood:

“It may be that it will snow tonight.”

 

try substituting “perhaps”:

Maybe she forgot I said I’d meet her at six o’clock”

becomes “Perhaps she forgot. . . .”

When the substitution makes sense

go with one word: “maybe.”

 

When you are wondering 

whether you may be waiting in the wrong cafe,

you’re dealing with a verb and its auxiliary

may be.” Two words

 

Common Errors in English Usage Dictionary:

Maybe & may be

“Maybe” is an adverb meaning “perhaps,” 

so if you are uncertain 

whether to use this word 

or the phrase “may be,” try substituting “perhaps”: 

“Maybe she forgot I said I’d meet her at six o’clock” 

becomes “Perhaps she forgot. . . .” 

 

When the substitution makes sense, 

go with one word: “maybe.”

 

When you are wondering 

whether you may be waiting in the wrong cafe,

you’re dealing with a verb 

and its auxiliary: “may be.” Two words

 

Common Errors In English Usage Dictionary

May & might & Maybe & may be

Most of the time “might” and “may” 

are almost interchangeable,

with “might” suggesting a somewhat lower probability.

 

You’re more likely to get wet 

if the forecaster says it may rain than if she says it might rain;

but substituting one for the other is unlikely to get you into trouble

so long as you stay in the present tense.

 

But “might” is also the past tense of the auxiliary verbmay,”

and is required in sentences like

Chuck might have avoided arrest for the robbery 

if he hadn’t given the teller his business card 

before asking for the money.

 

When speculating that events might 

have been other than they were

don’t substitute “may” for might."

 

As an aside: 

if you are an old-fashioned child

you will ask, “May I go out to play? 

rather thanCan I go out to play?” 

 

Despite the prevalence of the latter pattern

some adults still feel strongly that 

may” has to do with permission 

whereas “can” implies only physical ability.

 

But then if you have a parent like this 

you’ve had this pattern drilled into your head 

long before you encountered this page.

n Mistakes#Problem Words

 

Abused, Confused, & Misused Words by Mary Embree

might = force; strength; past tense of may

Not to be confused with:

mite = tiny particle; an insect; a small amount

 

Dictionary.com & Random House Kernerman Webster's College Dictionary,

USAGE FOR MAY

It was formerly considered correct to use may 

rather than can when referring to permission

as inyou may use the laboratory for your experiments,

but this use of may is now 

almost entirely restricted to polite questions

such as: may I open the window?

 

The use of may with if in constructions 

such as

your analysis may have been more more credible if …

is generally regarded as incorrect, might being preferred

your analysis might have been more credible if

 

American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language,

might

Usage Note: May or might?

In many situations,

the choice between these two verbs

can be clarified by remembering that 

might is the past tense form of may,

 

and that in English

a past tense form is used to refer not just to events 

that occurred in the past (She left yesterday),

but to hypothetical, counterfactual, or remotely possible situations

(If you left now, you'd get there on time.)

 

Thus, the past tense form might is appropriate 

in this sentence about 

a future event that is a remote possibility:

If I won the lottery, I might buy a yacht,

which contrasts with the present-tense version 

that indicates an open possibility:

If I win the lottery, I may buy a yacht.

 

When referring to a hypothetical 

or contrary-to-fact situation in the past,

rather than an imagined future situation,

the verbs are shifted to the remote past:

won becomes had won, 

and might buy becomes might have bought:

If I had won the lottery, I might have bought a yacht.

 

Since about the 1960s, however,

people have started using may have 

where might have would be expected

(as inIf he hadn't tripped, he may have won the race).

 

Although this usage is common in casual speech,

it is considered unacceptable by the majority of the Usage Panel.


In our 2012 survey, 97 percent of the Usage Panelists 

found the sentence

If John Lennon had not been shot, 

the Beatles might have gotten back together acceptable.

 

Only a third of the Panel (32 percent) 

approved of the same sentence 

with may have replacing might have.

 

Using may have for a past counterfactual situation 

instead of might have is not only frowned upon by the Panel 

but can also lead to confusion

since may have is best suited for a different kind of situation

present uncertainty about a past situation

Keeping the two forms distinct reduces ambiguity

 

He may have drowned, for example, 

is best used to mean that 

it is unknown whether the man drowned

not that the man narrowly escaped drowning

 

When may and might are used 

to indicate possibility or probability

as in 

He may lose his job or We might go on vacation next year, 

the two words are used almost interchangeably.

 

It is sometimes said that 

might suggests a lower probability than may,

perhaps because of its use in hypothetical statements 

that omit the conditional clause.

(You might get there on time can be thought of 

as short for If you hurried, you might get there on time). 

In practice, howeverfew people make this distinction.

 

Our Living Language 

In many Southern US varieties of English,

might can be paired with other auxiliary verbs

such as could, as in 

We might could park over there.

 

Words like might and could are known as modals,

since they express certain "moods

(for example

I might go indicates an uncertain mood on the part of the speaker).

 

Combinations 

such as might could, might would, and might can

are known as double modals.

 

Other less common combinations

include may can, may will, and might should.

 

Since double modals typically begin with may or might,

they lessen the degree of conviction or certainty

(much like the word possibly) more than a single modal does.

 

Double modals are used, for example

to minimize the force of what one is saying,

as when asking someone for a favor 

or when indicating displeasure.

 

Although double modals may sound odd outside of the South,

they carry little if any social stigma within the South

and are used by speakers 

of all social classes and educational levels

even in formal instances like political addresses.

 

Like many features of Southern varieties of English,

the use of double modals is probably due to 

the fact that many of the first English speakers 

in the South were Scotch-Irish,

whose speech made use of double modals.

 

Dictionary.com

How Did The Month Of May Get Its Name?


May mays seem like a little simple name,

but its origin is actually fairly complex and interesting.

 

Sit back and read up on this little word’sbig history.

 

What does May mean?

The fifth month of the Gregorian calendar,

May, is defined as “the fifth month of the year

containing 31 days.”

 

Got it. But where did this name come from?

The name for the month of May

along with the rest of the months of the year

comes from Latin. We can thank the Romans

from emperors to popes, for instituting the modern calendar.

 

May entered English in the 1050s

It developed from the Old English Maius, 

borrowed directly from the Latin Maius, 

short for Maius mēnsis, “Maia’s month.” 

 

But who is this Maia?

The Greek goddess Maia was one of the Pleiades, 

the companions of Artemis, goddess of the hunt

 

This Maia was the mother of Hermes, 

the messenger of the Gods.

But the Romans had yet another goddess named Maia

who just happened to share a name with the Greek goddess.

 

The Greek goddess became conflated 

with the Roman Maia Majesta,

a goddess of fertility and spring

appropriate for the growth and increase 

we see in the month of May.

 

Want to dig a little deeper? 

The Greek name Maia comes from a root 

meaning “mother, nurse, midwife.” 

The Roman Maia appears to be related to magnus

meaning “great” and source of such words as magnify.

 

May” vs. “may”?

That there is a month, May,

and an auxiliary verb, may, is a small linguistic coincidence

not a meaningful overlap.

 

The verb may came from the Old English mæg

ultimately related to a Germanic root 

meaningto be able, to be strong, to have power.”

 

“Who” vs. “whom”?

We’ve all come across pedants 

who love to correct people 

when they use who and whom.

 

So what is the correct choice?

Who is used as the subject of a sentence, 

while whom is used as the object in a sentence.


This means that if someone is performing actions 

in a sentence, who is the correct choice.

Who ate my cookie?

I don’t know who hid it.

 

To check

see if the sentence still makes sense

when you replace who with he or she 

(you might need to reword it slightly).

 

Whom is used for someone being acted on.

See if you can replace it in your sentence 

(with a little jiggling) with her or him.

Whom did you wave at?

Her husband, whom she wrote to every day, missed her terribly.

 

So it is correct to say to whom it may concern 

because it concerns her, not she.

 

Dictionary.com

USAGE FOR MAY

It was formerly considered correct 

to use may rather than can when referring to permission 

as inyou may use the laboratory for your experiments

 

but this use of may is now 

almost entirely restricted to polite questions 

such asmay I open the window? 


The use of may with if in constructions 

such asyour analysis may have been more more credible if … 

is generally regarded as incorrect

might being preferred

your analysis might have been more credible if …

 

Dictionary.com

MAY VS. MIGHT

MORE ABOUT MAY

Merriam-Webster Dictionary

Can vs. May: Usage Guide

Auxiliary verb

Can and may are most frequently interchangeable 

in uses denoting possibility

 

because the possibility of one's doing something 

may depend on another's acquiescence

they have also become interchangeable 

in the sense denoting permission.

 

The use of can to ask or grant permission 

has been common since the 19th century 

and is well established

although some commentators feel 

may is more appropriate in formal contexts.

 

May is relatively rare in negative constructions 

(mayn't is not common);

cannot and can't are usual in such contexts.

 

Merriam-Webster Dictionary

Usage Notes

'Can' vs. 'May'

Can you use 'can' or must you use 'may'?

 

What to Know

Can and may can both be used to ask for permission,

although "may" is considered more formal.

 

"May" is the older word and has meanings 

that refer to the ability to do something

the possibility of something, as well as granting permission.

 

"Can" first overlapped with the definition of 

"the ability to do something," 

and later took the "permission" definition as well.

 

We all know the joke (or, rather, “joke”): 

a student raises their hand and asks the teacher

Can I go to the bathroom?” 

and the teacher responds, “I don’t knowcan you?”

 

The “joke” here is based on the insistence that 

you should use may when asking for permission to do something, and can when speaking about ability.

 

By this logic, the student should have said 

May I go to the bathroom?” 

since their ability to use the facilities is likely not in question.

 

But the reality of the situation is that 

both can and may have been used 

historically to refer to permission 

and continue to be used so today

 

How did we end up in this situation?

 

Origin and Meaning of 'May'

May is the earlier verb, 

showing up in manuscripts from the 8th century

 

It originally referred to having strength or power

and then very quickly developed 

a meaning that referred to ability.

 

This particular meaning is no longer in current use, 

but we find a late representative of this use 

in Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales from 1395: 

 

“We mowen nat...It ouer take, it slit awey so faste” 

(“We may not overtake it, it slid away so fast”). 

 

May also developed a meaning referring to possibility

which we’re still familiar with today 

(“I may be able to have lunch with you this Thursday”), 

and the meaning that school teachers insist 

it has today–one that grants permission 

(“You may use the bathroom”). 

All four of these meanings were in use before 1000AD.

 

Overlap with 'Can'

Around that time, can came on the scene

It was a verb that originally meant “to know,” 

and then “to know how to do something,” 

and thento have the ability to do something.” 

 

This last meaning, which showed up around 1300

was can’s first semantic overlap with may

The overlap continued

by 1500, both can and may were used 

to refer to ability and possibility.

 

Given that there was already some 

overlap between the two words

it’s not surprising that by the end of the 1800s, 

can also came to meanto have permission.” 

(If there’s anything surprising in that, 

it’s perhaps that it took so long 

for can to copy that meaning of may’s.)

 

It didn’t take too long 

for teachers and grammarians of the day 

to proscribe that 

can should only be used of ability 

and may of permission. 

 

We find the rule spelled out clearly 

(complete with a fictional student-teacher exchange

in Charles Lurie’s 1926 How To Say It

Helpful Hints On English. 

 

There is no particular reason for the rule

except for the fact that may has been used longer 

to meanto give permissionthan can has.

 

Nonetheless, the “rule” lives on.

 

In reality,

can likely has more use in the “permission” sense than is recorded

as it is more informal and so shows up 

in speech more frequently than may does.

 

May is the more formal word, 

and if you are at all concerned about being tut-tutted, a safe choice.

 

Can is now the verb of choice for ability,

and both can and may are still used in the "possibility" sense.

 

You may use can if you wish

and you can use may if it makes you feel better.

 

Collins COBUILD English Usage

Maybe & perhaps

You use maybe or perhaps 

to indicate that something is possible,

although you are not certain about it.

 

There is no difference in meaning between these words.

Maybe he was wrong.

Perhaps Andrew is right after all.

 

Maybe is normally used only at the beginning of a clause.

Maybe he'll be prime minister one day.

I do think about having children, maybe when I'm 40.

 

Perhaps can be used in other positions in a clause.

If you live in the country, 

you can, perhaps, profit by buying and freezing local produce.

The Allies had better luck, perhaps, than they deserved.

It was perhaps Ellen's unconventional approach to life 

that made her such a great actress.

 

Be Careful!
Do not confuse maybe (/meɪbiː/) with may be (/meɪ biː/).

 

May be is used in sentences such as 

'He may be the best person for the job'.

 

Collins COBUILD English Usage

Might & may

 

Might and may are used mainly to talk about possibility.

They can also be used to make a request, 

to ask permission, or to make a suggestion.

 

When might and may are used with the same meaning

may is more formal than might

 

Might and may are called modals.

 

In conversation,

the negative form mightn't is often used instead of 'might not'.

The form mayn't is much less common

People usually use the full form may not.

He mightn't have time to see you.

It may not be as hard as you think.

 

1. possibility: the present and the future

You can use might or may to say that 

it is possible that something is true 

or that something will happen in the future.

I might see you at the party.

This may be why she enjoys her work.

 

You can use could in a similar way

but only in positive sentences.

Don't eat it. It could be poisonous.

See can - could - be able to

 

You can use might well or may well to show that

it is fairly likely that something is true.

You might well be right.

I think that may well be the last time we see him.

 

You use might not or may not to say that 

it is possible that something is not true.

He might not like spicy food.

That may not be the reason she left.

 

Be Careful!

Don't use 'might not' or 'may not' to say that 

it is impossible that something is true.

Instead you use could not, cannot, or can't.

She could not have known what happened unless she was there.

He cannot be younger than me.

You can't talk to the dead.

 

Be Careful!

Don't use 'may' when you are asking if something is possible.

Don't say, for example, 'May he be right?'

Say 'Might he be right?' or, more usually, 'Could he be right?'

Might we have got the date wrong?

Could this be true?

 

Be Careful!

Don't say 'What may happen?'

You usually say 'What is likely to happen?'

What are likely to be the effects of these changes?

 

2. possibility: the past

You use might or may with have to say that 

it is possible that something happened in the past

but you do not know whether it happened or not.

Jorge didn't play well. He might have been feeling tired.

I may have been a little unfair to you.

 

Could have can be used in a similar way.

It could have been one of the staff that stole the money.

 

Be Careful!

However, if something did not happen 

and you want to say that 

there was a possibility of it happening, 

you can only use might have or could have.

Don't use 'may have'.

 

For example, 

you say 'If he hadn't fallen, he might have won the race'.

Don't say 'If he hadn't hurt his ankle, he may have won the race'.

A lot of men died who might have been saved.

 

You use might not or may not with have 

to say that it is possible 

that something did not happen or was not true.

They might not have got your message.

Her parents may not have realized what she was doing.

 

Be Careful!

Don't use 'might not have' or 'may not have'

to say that it is impossible that something happened or was true.

 

Instead you use could not have or, 

in British English, cannot have.

They could not have guessed what was going to happen.

The measurement can't have been wrong.

 

3. requests and permission

In formal English

may and might are sometimes used for 

making a request, or asking or giving permission.

Might I ask a question?

You may leave the table.

 

4. suggestions

Might is often used in polite suggestions.

You might like to read this and see what you think.

I think it might be better to switch off your phones.

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