American Dictionary
Definition shall in American English
shall
modal verb
What are red words?
Around 90% of spoken and written English relies on just 7,500 common words.
These words are highlighted in red and are ranked using a star system.
- One-star words are commonly used
- Two-star words are even more common
- Three-star words are the most frequently used
modal verb
What are red words?
Around 90% of spoken and written English relies on just 7,500 common words.These words are highlighted in red and are ranked using a star system.
- One-star words are commonly used
- Two-star words are even more common
- Three-star words are the most frequently used
Shall is usually followed by an infinitive without “to”: I shall explain everything later. Sometimes it is used without a following infinitive: I have never visited Africa and probably never shall.
Shall does not change its form, so the third person singular form does not end in “-s”: The President shall appoint all ambassadors with the consent of the Senate.
Questions and negatives are formed without “do”: Shall I come with you?
The negative form shall not can be shortened in conversation or informal writing to shan’t, especially in British English.
Shall has no participles and no infinitive form. In British English, shall can be used for forming the future tense of another verb when the subject is “I” or “we,” but it does not have a future tense of its own: We shall see you tomorrow.
Should can sometimes be used as the past tense of shall, for example, in indirect speech introduced by a verb in the past tense: I hoped that I should not need to defend myself.
Where shall we meet?
By nightfall we shall have achieved our objectives.
used in instructions and legal documents for saying that something must be done
used for emphasizing that you are determined that something will definitely happen
