Verbs

Should and Shouldn't: Giving Advice in English

Level A2 Verbs
Key idea

Use 'should' plus the base form of a verb to give advice or say what the right thing to do is: "You should see a doctor." The negative, 'shouldn't', advises against something: "We shouldn't be late." Like other modal verbs, 'should' never takes 'to' (not "should to rest") and never uses 'do' in questions. To ask for advice, just invert the subject and 'should': "Should I call him?"

Examples

  • You should see a doctor. advising someone to see a doctor
  • We shouldn't be late. advising against being late
  • Should I call him? asking for advice

The full lesson

Everything in the video, in text.

  1. βœ— You should to rest. extra β€œto”
    βœ“ You should rest. clean advice

    One tiny word makes the difference.

    Your friend is sick, and you want to help. But say it wrong, and your advice sounds broken.

  2. should / shouldn't

    the everyday way to give advice

    In two minutes, you'll give advice in English perfectly. Let's master should and shouldn't.

  3. πŸ’‘

    should + base verb = advice

    The rule is simple. Use should plus the base verb to give advice β€” to say what is the right thing to do.

  4. You should see a doctor.

    So if a friend feels ill, you say: You should see a doctor.

  5. should + rest

    I should rest
    You should rest
    She should rest
    They should rest

    There's no to, and no do β€” should is a modal verb. The same form works for everyone: I, you, he, she, we, they.

  6. advise for vs. advise against

    should
    • You should rest.
    • do this
    shouldn't
    • You shouldn't worry.
    • avoid this

    To advise against something, just add n't. Shouldn't means it's not a good idea.

  7. We shouldn't be late.

    Here's shouldn't in action, telling people what to avoid: We shouldn't be late.

  8. Question? Put should first: Should I …?

    To ask for advice, don't use do. Just put should first β€” invert it.

  9. Should I call him?

    invert, no β€œdo”

    So you'd ask: Should I call him? No do, no to β€” just should at the front.

  10. βœ— You should to rest. never β€œto”
    βœ“ You should rest. base verb only

    Modals take no β€œto”.

    Now the big trap. Never add to after should. It's You should rest β€” not should to rest.

  11. βœ— Do I should go? no β€œdo”
    βœ“ Should I go? just invert

    Questions: flip should to the front.

    And in questions, never use do. Not Do I should go? β€” just Should I go?

  12. Remember

    • should + base verb = advice
    • shouldn't = advise against
    • Should I …? β€” no β€œdo”, no β€œto”

    That's it. Should plus the base verb for advice, n't to advise against, and should first for questions.