About Can
As the photovoltaic (PV) industry continues to evolve, advancements in Can have become critical to optimizing the utilization of renewable energy sources. From innovative battery technologies to intelligent energy management systems, these solutions are transforming the way we store and distribute solar-generated electricity.
About Can video introduction
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By interacting with our online customer service, you'll gain a deep understanding of the various Can featured in our extensive catalog, such as high-efficiency storage batteries and intelligent energy management systems, and how they work together to provide a stable and reliable power supply for your PV projects.
5 FAQs about [Can]
What does 'can' mean?
We cannot buy food and clothes and pay for rent and utilities on $20 a week. You use can to indicate that something is true sometimes or is true in some circumstances. ...long-term therapy that can last five years or more.
What is the difference between can and could?
You use can to say that something is sometimes possible. Sudden changes can sometimes have a negative effect. You use could have to say that there is a possibility that something was true in the past. He could have been in the house on his own. Might have and may have can be used in a similar way.
What is the difference between 'can' and'may'?
Traditional grammar books insist that only may conveys "permission,'' but both words are now regularly used with this meaning: Can (or May) I borrow your tape recorder? can occurs this way chiefly in spoken English; may occurs more frequently in formal speech and writing.
What is the past tense of could?
Usage Could is used as the past tense of can to describe an ability that someone had in the past or to say that something was possible in the past. I could run fast when I was young, but I can't run fast now. It used to be that you could drive for miles here without seeing another person, but now there are houses and people everywhere.
Where does the word can come from?
From Middle English can, first and third person singular of connen, cunnen (“to be able, know how”), from Old English can (n), first and third person singular of cunnan (“to know how”), from Proto-West Germanic *kunnan, from Proto-Germanic *kunnaną, from Proto-Indo-European *ǵneh₃- (whence also know). Doublet of con. See also: canny, cunning.


