Once You Have Me Youll Always Come Back
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Tiggy from Belgium writes: I would like to know what the difference is between must and have to? When should I use one and not the other? |
must, have to and have got to: expressing the present Must, have to and have got to are all used to express obligation or the need to do something. They can be used interchangeably in the present tense, except that must suggests that it is the speaker who has decided that something is necessary, whereas have to and have got to suggest that somebody else has imposed the decision. Have got to is characteristic of very informal speech. Have to sounds slightly more formal. |
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With frequency adverbs such as always, often, sometimes, never, etc, have to is normally preferred:
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must and have to: expressing the future and the past Must and have got to have no future or past tense forms. We cannot say: I had got to.../ I'll have got to.../ I'll must.../ I've must.... However we can also use must to express future as well as present intention, especially if it is the speaker who decides that something is necessary. But it cannot be used to express past intention. Have to is the only one of the three that possesses past and future forms. | ||||
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must, have to and have got to in the interrogative Have to and have got to are often preferred in the interrogative, especially if the obligation is imposed from the outside. | ||||
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have to and mustn't We have to use have to for the negative of must when there is no obligation or necessity to do something:
We use mustn't to say that something is not allowed
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Once You Have Me Youll Always Come Back
Source: https://www.bbc.co.uk/worldservice/learningenglish/youmeus/learnit/learnitv127.shtml
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