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  • What is the difference between can and could in Can could you please . . .
    37 Can you please explain this to me? Could you please explain this to me? I am unable to figure out which to use which situation I did google, and some posts say they are both the same, even if the second one is more formal Other posts say could is the past tense of can, but in the above example, I don't think could is used as past tense of can
  • word usage - Can you, Will you, Could you and Would you? - English . . .
    0 One of my textbooks says that "would you ~?" is the politest of the four to ask someone a favor Another textbook, however, says that "will you" is the least polite and that "can you" and "could you" are politer than "will you" and "would you"
  • Starting a question with Could you vs. Can you? [duplicate]
    0 Both are fine grammatically, but it appears that you are aiming for a relatively formal setting in which case "Could" is slightly more formal-sounding Neither would be incorrect, however "Could" also implies more of a polite request which may be refused, rather than a polite order, although this is a soft implication and does not make "Can
  • Can you please vs. Could you please [duplicate]
    I heard using 'could' is for politeness When I request something, should I say "Can you please" or "Could you please"? Does the latter sound over-polite and pretentious?
  • may you or can you? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Please include the research you've done, or consider if your question suits our English Language Learners site better Questions that can be answered using commonly-available references are off-topic
  • american english - “Can you do this?” vs. “Can you please do this . . .
    Could you please pass the salt? This is the proper, polite form of this request We have both the conditional and the "please" in there, so the request has been softened about as far as it can be without resorting to overblown false humility ("I was wondering if I could possibly trouble you to do me the immense favor of please passing the salt")
  • politeness - Proper and polite usage of can you - English Language . . .
    There's nothing impolite about can you on its own Almost always, politeness comes down to tone of voice and body language, or, in the case of writing, context
  • Are you able to vs Can you vs Could you vs Would you
    I would say that "Can you" and "Could you" were fairly informal - "Could you throw me that teatowel?" "Would you" is a polite request - "Would you come this way please?" I think one of the first two would be best when asking a superior to do something for you, or "Would you mind doing X?"
  • Is either can or could more polite? [duplicate]
    The problem is that "can you x" is like asking "are you able to x" whereas "could you x" is like asking "are you willing to x" So yeah, politeness isn't the issue at all This is probably why, even if you're not aware of the nuanced meaning, could is more polite It's not insulting the target by questioning their ability to perform something
  • grammaticality - Difference between Cant you and Can you not . . .
    So, does it make a difference when you use can't you and can you not? Or anything else like it, such as is it not and isn't it? I also find that question tags often use those two types of tags, which in my mind are somewhat not interchangeable, such as: It's surprisingly hard to find, is it not? It's surprisingly hard to find, isn't it?





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