might

might
may, might
1. With reference to present or future possibility, may and might are both used, but with may the possibility is more open and with might it is more tentative or remote: (may)

• The ACLU may have a strong case —Economist, 1980

• The cyclists may use up to 6,000 calories during a race —Times, 1983

(might) The news that the Met season might have to be cancelled…is an annual threat —Listener, 1980

• Some players get a ‘buzz’ from the game [of Space Invaders] and that might explain why they become addicted —Times, 1983

• What is a little surprising is that even the programme's adult representatives claim they don't quite know what a bonk might be —Today, 1986.

2. With reference to possibility in the past, may have leaves it open whether an event or circumstance was actually the case, whereas might have implies that it was not, and is explicit that it was not when the statement is part of an unfulfilled condition introduced by if or by inversion (as in the 1983 Daily Telegraph example below): (may have)

• It may have been an awful night…but the meat and potato pies were brill —Guardian, 1983

• Police say they're anxious to trace a car and a van which may have been used by the gang —television news broadcast, 1993

• (might have) ‘You might have been killed yourself.’ ‘Not much chance; the raid had already gone past us.’ —A. Crawley, 1983

• Had the Liberal Yellow Book been published in 1920 our history might have been different —Daily Telegraph, 1983

• Once he might have answered differently —might have said that the two things were different in kind —but now he was not so certain —D. Wingrove, 1990.

It is incorrect to use may have when the possibility it expresses is not an open one, although this misuse is becoming increasingly and disturbingly common:

• If some of the resources squandered this morning had been used more wisely, we may have been able to take steps to save his life —Scotsman, 1989

• This advice may have stopped a fashion faux pas.…‘I wore my favourite hound's-tooth miniskirt on my first day.…What a mistake’ —Times, 2004

• If Apple had licensed Windows for its computers instead of insisting on its own operating system, it may not have squandered the lead built up with the launch of the Macintosh in 1984 —Independent, 2006.

3. There are a few idiomatic uses of might and might have that are worth noting: You might have said something! (= you should have said something) / Might I suggest…? (= a polite, now somewhat old-fashioned alternative for May I…?). Might have is occasionally used with future reference, again with a suggestion of doubt about fulfilment:

• The wind has dropped so it feels hotter and tomorrow might be a degree or two higher —Sunday Mirror, 2007.


Modern English usage. 2014.

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  • Might — Might, n. [AS. meaht, miht, from the root of magan to be able, E. may; akin to D. magt, OS. maht, G. macht, Icel. m[=a]ttr, Goth. mahts. [root]103. See {May}, v.] Force or power of any kind, whether of body or mind; energy or intensity of purpose …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Might — may refer to: Might, an English auxiliary verb, a verb whose function it is to give further semantic or syntactic information about the main or full verb which follows it Might , a song by Modest Mouse from their 1996 album This Is a Long Drive… …   Wikipedia

  • Might! — Studio album by NON Released 1995 Genre Noise Industrial Label …   Wikipedia

  • might — Ⅰ. might [1] ► MODAL VERB (3rd sing. present might) past of MAY(Cf. ↑may). 1) used to express possibility or make a suggestion. 2) used politely or tentatively in questions and requests. Ⅱ. might …   English terms dictionary

  • might — might1 [mīt] v.aux. [ME mihte < OE, akin to Ger möchte] 1. pt. of MAY1 2. used as a modal auxiliary in verbal phrases with present or future time reference, generally equivalent to MAY1 in meaning and use, with the following functions: a)… …   English World dictionary

  • might|y — «MY tee», adjective, might|i|er, might|i|est, adverb, noun, plural might|ies. –adj. 1. showing strength or power; powerful; …   Useful english dictionary

  • Might — (m[imac]t), imp. of {May}. [AS. meahte, mihte.] [1913 Webster] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • might — I noun authoritativeness, brawn, durability, efficacy, energy, force, greatness, influence, intensity, main force, mightiness, muscle, potency, potential, powerfulness, prowess, puissance, robustness, severity, sinew, strength, sturdiness,… …   Law dictionary

  • might — n strength, energy, *power, force, puissance Analogous words: vigorousness or vigor, strenuousness, energeticness, lustiness (see corresponding adjectives at VIGOROUS): potency, powerfulness, forcibleness, forcefulness (see corresponding… …   New Dictionary of Synonyms

  • might — [n] ability, power adequacy, arm, authority, capability, capacity, clout, command, competence, control, domination, efficacy, efficiency, energy, force, forcefulness, forcibleness, get up and go*, jurisdiction, lustiness, mastery, moxie*, muscle* …   New thesaurus

  • might|i|ly — «MY tuh lee», adverb. 1. in a mighty manner; powerfully; vigorously: »Samson strove mightily and pulled the pillars down. 2. very much; greatly: »We were mightily pleased at winning …   Useful english dictionary

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