📖 Lesson B1 Grammar📐 Grammar

🔎 Summit: Must Be & Can't Be

The studio door is unlocked, the tea is still warm, and nothing is missing — someone must be near. Students learn to make near-certain deductions with must be, rule out impossible ideas with can’t be, and tie every deduction to evidence with because. They finish by writing a 50–80-word case report about a scene of their own.

🎒 Teens (11–16) schedule 45 min signal_cellular_alt Medium
NEW🔒 PRO

view_agenda Lesson Plan

  • Four quick detective scenes to read and discuss
  • Say what you know for sure — before any grammar

translate Key Vocabulary

evidencecluedeductioncertainimpossiblelogicalprovesuspectmysteryconclusion

auto_fix_high Grammar Points

  • Deduction with must be: subject + must + be + noun/adjective/-ing when evidence makes something almost certainly true
  • Deduction with can’t be: subject + can’t + be + noun/adjective/-ing when evidence makes something impossible
  • The opposite of must be in deductions is can’t be — mustn’t expresses rules, not deductions
  • Evidence sentences: clue + deduction (The lights are on, so someone must be inside)

arrow_upward Prerequisites

Join Our Classes!

We believe the right questions bring the right answers. Whether you have a question about your English-learning journey or need help with a specific language skill, we're always here for you.

route The FleyPath

Your child's personal roadmap — 3, 6 or 12 months

🚀Start
👋Hello
😊Body
🦁Animals
🔢Numbers
🏆Confident English
sports_esports Gamified English practice

Like a game — except they're really learning