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A helping (or auxiliary) verb is placed in front of a main verb to form a verb phrase (a verb of two or more words: are going, will be competing, etc.).
There are two types of helping verbs: primary helping verbs and modal helping verbs.
The three primary helping verbs are be, do and have. Note that these helping verbs may take different forms, as shown below:
When be and have are used as helping verbs, the main verb that comes after them almost always changes its form:
In addition to acting as helping verbs, be, do and have can act as main verbs:
There are 9 principal modal verbs:
After these modal verbs, the main verb does not change its form; it is always in its base form (the form in which it is listed in the dictionary):
Unlike the primary helping verbs, modal verbs do not change their form to agree with different subjects. In the examples below, can does not change, no matter what subject it follows:
Unlike the primary helping verbs, the modal verbs must always be used with a main verb. They occur alone only when the main verb has already been used once and is being left understood the second time to avoid repetition:
In a verb phrase containing both modal and primary helping verbs, the modal verb comes first:
We use helping verbs for the following purposes:
Note: Adverbs (such as the adverb not or its contraction n’t) often appear in the middle of a verb phrase—but they are not verbs. They modify the verb phrase but are not part of it.
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