1 past of MAY
- in reported speech, expressing possibility or permission: he said he might be late.
- expressing a possibility based on a condition not fulfilled: we might have won if we'd played better.
- expressing annoyance about something someone has done: you might have told me!
- expressing purpose: he avoided social work engagements so that he might work.
2 used in questions and requests
- tentatively asking permission: might I ask one question?
- expressing a polite request: you might just call me Jane, if you don't mind.
- asking for information esp. condescendingly: and who might you be?
3 expressing possibility: this might be true.
- making a suggestion: you might try nonprescription pain relievers.
PHRASES
might as well 1 used to make an unenthusiastic suggestion: I might as well begin. 2 used to indicate that a situation is the same as if the hypothetical thing stated were true: for readers seeking illumination, this book might as well have been written in Serbo-Croatian
might have known (or guessed) used to express ones lack of surprise about something: I might have known it was you.
1 | physical strength: He swung with all his might. |
2 superior power or strength; force: the theory that might makes right. |
3 | power or ability to do or accomplish; capacity: the might of the ballot box. |
- D&C 1:18-39 -
Things that are planned might happen, they might not, it all depends on what and how we choose to live. Somethings might happen today, tomorrow, or never, but things will happen. You might not win a million dollars today or save the world from grief and heartache, but you might be able to help one person feel like a million dollars and save them from their world of grief and heartache. You might be struck by lighting and die today, and be scared half to death, and maybe your homework really will kill you, but those things just might happen. What do you want to MAKE happen today?
Do it.
i wrote a new song, today, horray!
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