May know

1. If you use "You may know that " to a listener, you are implying that they know it now, and they may have known it for some time, but the relevance of the knowledge is right now. If you use "You may have known that " the relevance of the knowledge is in that past time -- and presumably if they knew it then, they still know it now. 1 stalking på messenger 2 What to Know. Can and may are both used to talk about permission. Using can in this sense isn't incorrect but it is considered informal. If you want to sound formal, use may. 3 who is stalking my facebook 4 May Know synonyms - 71 Words and Phrases for May Know. can know. cannot know. could know. may be aware. might know. would know. allowed to know. can experience. 5 Possibility When we talk about possibility, we use can, could and may, but they are different in meaning. Compare Permission We use can, could and may to ask for permission. We use can and may, but not could, to give permission. May is less common: Compare Requests When we make requests, we can use can or could (but not may). 6 Correct: As you may know, we want to help them. You can also mix things up with a few variations. Variations will help to keep your writing engaging, such as: Variation 1: Using might instead of may. Correct: As you might know; Correct: As you may know; Variation 2: Excluding may. Correct: As you know; Correct: As you may know. 7 facebook friends suggestion algorithm 8 If you visit someone's facebook profile, someone you are not friends with, you'll appear in their People You May Know. 9 Lei og se filmen People You May Know med Nick Thune, Halston Sage, Kaily Smith Westbrook, Nicholas Rutherford, Carly Chaikin, Gillian Alexy, Ian Harding. 10 2 "How did you solve it?" is a valid question. If you add a phrase for extra politeness (such as 'May I know', 'Could you tell me'), you need to change the question to a statement. You want to know the answer, not the question! "May I know how you did solve it?" – Kate Bunting at Add a comment. 11 The differences between may and might extend to may be and might be. May be is a verb phrase that, like may, indicates a likely possibility. Here is an example: The students may be going on a field trip next week if the budget is approved. Might be is also a verb phrase. It can be used to form a polite suggestion or, like might on its own. 12