able

able — adjective

1. having what you need to do something — for example the strength, knowledge, time

1.形容詞A2
釋義

having what you need to do something — for example the strength, knowledge, time, money, or chance — so that doing it is possible for you.

例句

Bram was able to lift the heavy box because she trains at the gym every morning.

be able to + verb showing physical capability

After three months of lessons, Wen is finally able to read short stories in Spanish.

be able to + verb after gaining a skill

同義詞
  • capable

    more formal; often used attributively (a capable manager)

  • can

    modal verb; covers similar meaning but no infinitive form, so 'able to' fills the gap after 'will', 'have', etc.

  • fit

    stresses being in the right physical or mental state for an action

反義詞
  • unable

    direct opposite, same grammar (be unable to + verb)

  • incapable

    stronger; suggests a long-term lack rather than a one-off limit

文法句型

be able to + verb

able to do something

用法筆記

Predicative only — cannot stand before a noun in this sense. You say 'she is able to swim' but not 'an able to swim girl'. Past form 'was/were able to' often replaces 'could' when reporting one specific success rather than a general capacity.

常見錯誤

I am able swim.
I am able to swim.
💡always followed by 'to' + base verb.
She could finish the marathon yesterday.
She was able to finish the marathon yesterday.
💡for one specific past achievement, prefer 'was/were able to' over 'could'.

2. to do something with less difficulty than before, usually after some change in y

2.形容詞B1
釋義

to do something with less difficulty than before, usually after some change in your situation that makes the task smoother.

例句

With her new glasses, Grandma Lin is much better able to read the newspaper at breakfast.

comparative: better able to + verb

After moving closer to the office, Theo is more able to spend evenings with his children.

more able to + verb

同義詞
反義詞
  • less able to

    the comparative opposite within the same pattern

文法句型

be better able to + verb

be more able to + verb

用法筆記

Distinguish from sense 1: this sense almost always appears with 'better', 'more', 'less', or 'again', signalling a change that has made the action easier than it was. Plain 'be able to' without one of these markers belongs to sense 1.

常見錯誤

After surgery, he is able to walk than before.
After surgery, he is better able to walk than before.
💡needs 'better' or 'more' to mark the comparison.

3. clever and good at a job — used as a quiet compliment to describe someone whose

3.形容詞C2
釋義

clever and good at a job — used as a quiet compliment to describe someone whose work is reliably of high quality.

例句

Dr. Sven is an able surgeon whose patients travel from across the country to see her.

attributive: an able + profession noun

The new mayor surrounded herself with able advisers who knew the city well.

attributive plural: able + people noun

同義詞
  • capable

    very close in meaning; works both before and after the noun, unlike sense 3 of 'able'

  • competent

    suggests meeting the standard rather than going beyond it

  • talented

    stresses a natural gift, not just trained skill

  • skilled

    implies practised technique in a specific craft

反義詞
  • incompetent

    stronger; suggests work falls below an acceptable level

  • inept

    formal; stresses clumsy or awkward performance

文法句型

an able + noun

用法筆記

Attributive only — placed before a noun, never after a linking verb in this sense. 'She is able' means sense 1 (she can do it), not 'she is skilful'. Common with profession nouns: lawyer, manager, teacher, leader, scholar.

常見錯誤

My new colleague is very able.' (when meaning skilful)
My new colleague is very capable.' or 'I have a very able new colleague.
💡to compliment skill, place 'able' before the noun.
a able player
an able player
💡'able' starts with a vowel sound, so the article is 'an'.

able — suffix