UNIT 34 · Intermediate · B1–B2

Should 2“should after verbs/adjectives · Should you … · if … should” — 44 interactive questions

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📖 Grammar Reference — Should 2

Study the notes, then work through the six exercises.

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What you’ll learnshould after verbs & adjectives · Should you …
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~15 minNotes + 6 exercises
44 questionsInstant feedback

A should after certain verbs

They insisted that he should apologise.

After verbs of advising, asking or demanding, we often use that … should + base verb:

suggest / proposeI suggested that she should rest.
recommend / adviseThe doctor recommended that I should wait.
insist / demandThey insisted that he should pay.

💡 You can leave should out and use just the base verb: I suggested that she rest. Both are correct.

B should after certain adjectives

It’s strange that he should be late.

After it’s + adjective, we use that … should to react to something or call it surprising:

strange / odd / funnysurprisingIt’s odd that she should say that.
natural / typicalexpected reactionIt’s natural that they should worry.
important / essentialnecessaryIt’s essential that everyone should come.

💡 I was surprised that he should react like that.should adds the idea of surprise or a strong reaction.

C If … should and Should you …

For something that is possible but not very likely, we can use if … should. You can drop if and start with Should:

with if If you should need help, call me. ✓
inversion Should you need help, call me. ✓
advising verb → that … should it’s strange → that … should unlikely → if you should / Should you

💡 Should you … (no if) is a little more formal: Should you change your mind, let us know.

D I should / I shouldn’t = “if I were you”

In informal advice, I should / I shouldn’t can mean the same as I would / I wouldn’t — used with if I were you:

I should …I should take a coat if I were you.
I shouldn’t …I shouldn’t worry about it if I were you.
advice I shouldn’t say anything yet. ✓ (= I wouldn’t)
not a command — it’s a gentle suggestion.

💡 Here I should is not about duty — it’s a soft way to say I would (if I were you).

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Rememberafter suggest/insist/recommend/demand/propose → that … should do (or just the base verb) · after it’s strange/odd/natural/important/essential → that … should · unlikely possibility → if you should / Should you · I should / I shouldn’t = I would / I wouldn’t (if I were you). Quick check: It’s strange that he should be late (reaction) — the base verb stays the same: should be, never should to be.

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Original practice material inspired by the English Grammar in Use syllabus (Cambridge University Press). Example sentences and exercises are written by All English 4U.