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New2grammar Posted 18 years ago
Grammar

might not have or may not have

She may not have opened your drawer. Don't yell when you talk to her.

She might not have opened your drawer. Don't yell when you talk to her.

1. I don't think any of the above is hypothetical. Please correct me if I'm wrong.
2. Which is correct?

Thanks in advance.
  

Top answer

I think the first one is correct.

  • I think the first one is correct.
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3 Answers
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I think the first one is correct.
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When it's a matter of indicating a possibility, may and might are equivalent. You can use either, so both are fine.
CJ

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