Jumat, 13 April 2012

EXAMPLE OF MODAL AUXILIARIES IN SENTENCES

Nama  : Syahrul Rifai
NPM   : 22209635
Kelas  : 3EB04

May
1. formal permission
Thus, the average price sensitivity may change because of the new mix of consumers that increased advertising has attracted.

2. less than 50% certainty
By representing transactions in this way, factor classifications may be set independently of institutions, enabling the underlying characteristics and policy concerns about factor markets and domestic institutions to be accommodated simultaneously.

Might
1. less than 50% certainty
One is that the price sensitivity of existing consumers might be increasing.

2. polite request (rare)
On the other hand, how much might I save in repair costs if I get a new car?

Should
1. advisability
This assumption is in line with the World Tourism Organisation recommendations on Tourism Satellite Accounts (TSA) that some parts of exports should be attributed to foreign tourism.

2. 90% certainty
The results that are obtained from the model should provide useful implications for future economic policy-making, which is also compatible with the growth of foreign tourism and the overall development of the economy.

Ought to
1. advisability
Normative economics seeks to identify what economies ought to be like.

2. 90% certainty
We ought to invest to get the best value after consideration of risk.

Had better
1. advisability with threat of bad result
The old saying that you had better be good with numbers to be an accountant can't be any more true.

Be supposed to
1. expectation
Although trade liberalisation is supposed to bring about long-term benefits by allowing countries to reap gains from specialisation in production on the basis of their comparative advantage, a number of problems may occur.

Be to
1. strong expectation
Therefore the aim of this paper is to develop existing research in the area by examining the economic impacts of tourism within the macroeconomic context of globalisation in the form of increasing trade liberalisation, as well as in the context of lower domestic taxation.

Must
1. strong necessity
EERE, under requirements of the Government Performance Results Act (GPRA), must estimate the benefits of their portfolio of energy efficiency programs.

2. 95% certainty
It must be noted that every SAM provides a static image or 'snapshot' of an economy.

Have to
1. necessity
Mitra and Lynch ( 1993 ), in an experimental study, showed that non-price advertising can increase price elasticity by increasing the number of brands considered, particularly in product markets in which consumers have to rely on memory to generate alternatives.

2. lack of necessity(negative)
The good news is that you don’t have to be left in the dark in regards to the status of your refund.

Have got to
1. necessity
You have got to be prepared to live with little access to money, banks, gas, electricity and anything else you take for granted in your daily life.

Will
1. 100% certainty
The tourism-CGE model that will be developed for Indonesia will permit a range of analysis relating to ongoing economic issues related to tourism.

2. willingness
Second the model will facilitate analysis of the economy-wide effects and distributional implications of globalization and the growth in foreign tourism.

Be going to
1. 100% certainty
This is going to be difficult as the companies that Microsoft buys parts from are going to have the same pressures and incentives to raise prices that Walmart and Microsoft do.

2. definite plan
These results highlight the fact that demand side cost sharing is going to be effective as a cost control mechanism as a country’s economy and income level grow.

Can
1. ability/possibility
Nevertheless, it can provide the statistical basis for the development of plausible models when more than a static image is required.

2. impossibility (negative only)
This is a fixed effect because the states have those resources due to geographical factors that cannot change in the sample period.

Could
1. less than 50% certainty
Moreover, aggregate metropolitan density could be more sensitive than perceived density to the metropolitan boundaries used for estimation.

2. impossibility (negative only)
This can either reflect that fuel price does not indeed affect demand for cars, but also that the cross-sectional dataset used was not in price equilibrium and the effect could not be captured by a static model.

Be able to
1. ability
To be able to deduct the fuel cost variable available in the Millenium Cities Database (fuel price per km), the private vehicle user cost per passenger kilometre was converted to private vehicle user cost per vehicle kilometre assuming an average vehicle occupancy of 1.33 for all cities.

Would
1. preference
That is why I would rather invest in Turkey.

2. repeated action in the past
For example, if an experiment were to be conducted to test the hypothesis in question, advertising would be allowed in some states and not in other states.

Used to
1. repeated action in the past
These differences refer to the tariff structure (decreasing, flat, increasing), the type of price used to estimate the elasticity (average, marginal or Shin), the use of a difference variable, and the application of the two-error model.

Shall
1. polite question to make a suggestion
Shall I invest in yet another study?

2. future with “I” or “we” as subject
I shall introduce the four key ‘accounting concepts’ upon which much financial management is based and which underpin many of the conventions and procedures of day-to-day accountancy.