1. ABILITY
We use can to describe an ability and cannot or can’t to describe a lack of ability in the present:
She can speak Spanish but she can’t speak Italian.
If the present ability is surprising or involves overcoming some difficulty, we can also use is/are able to:
Despite his handicap he is able to drive a car.
To emphasise the difficulty or to suggest a great effort (in the present, past or future) we use manage to. In more formal English we can also use succeed in + -ing form:
Do you think she’ll manage to get a visa?
The army succeeded in defeating their enemy.
To describe a future ability we use will be able to:
Will I be able to speak fluently by the end of the course?
We also use be able to where can/could is grammatically impossible, for example:
I haven’t been able to drive since I dislocated my wrist. (with the perfect aspect)
We love being able to talk the local language. (with -ing forms and infinitives)
We use could to describe the possession of an ability in the past:
Mozart could play the piano at the age of five.
To describe the successful use of an ability on a specific occasion we do not use could, but rather, was/were able to:
Mike's car broke down but fortunately he was able to repair it.
But we can use could in questions, and in sentences with limiting adverbs such as only or hardly:
‘Could you fix the computer yourself?’ ‘No, I could only back up the key files.’
She was so exhausted she could hardly speak.
We use couldn’t or was/were not able to to describe a lack of ability or success:
Mozart couldn’t speak French.
Despite being a mechanic, Mike couldn’t fix his car when it broke down yesterday.
2. POSSIBILITY, DEDUCTION AND SPECULATION
3. ARRANGMENTS, SUGGESTIONS, OFFERS
4. ASKING FOR AND GIVING/REFUSING PERMISSION
5. OBLIGATION AND NECESSITY
6. PROHIBITION AND CRITICISM
7. ABSENCE OF OBLIGATION OR NECESSITY
8. RECOMMENDATION AND ADVICE
9. LOGICAL DEDUCTION AND PROBABILITY
10. WILLINGNESS AND REFUSAL