[go: up one dir, main page]

Jump to content

ought

From Wiktionary
ought is one of the 1000 most common headwords.
otherwise - ought - out


Other spellings

[change]

Pronunciation

[change]

Verb

[change]

Present
ought

Past
none

Negative
oughtn't

  1. (modal) If you ought to do something, doing it is better than not doing it.
    I think perhaps we ought to help her.
    It's dangerous and there ought not to be any children close by.
    We really ought to go a bit early because of the snow.
    What time ought the school to open?
    I suppose I ought to write her an e-mail.
  2. (modal) If something ought to be true, you have reason to believe it, but you don't know, or it is not true.
    He ought to be here by now.
    You ought to be able to finish that in an hour.

Usage notes

[change]

Ought is different from other modal auxiliaries (e.g., may, will, could) in that it takes to + bare infinitival clause instead of a bare infinitival clause. For example:

I will go.
I ought to go.

There is, however, a trend to use ought with a bare infinitival clause in negatives and certain questions. For example:

You oughtn't (to) worry about it.
Ought we (to) ask her about it?