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Anonymous Posted 13 years ago
Grammar

Have to and Must

In what situation should I use ?have to? and?must? properly?
?Have to? is used for the opinion from the outside and?must? has been heard use to the thing that I thought of.
Please tell me.
  

Top answer

Have to? must? has been heard use to the thing that I thought of You have a rough idea of the official difference: 'have to' is used of an external command and 'must' is used of a command or feeling of necessity from within oneself.

  • Have to?
  • must?
  • has been heard use to the thing that I thought of You have a rough idea of the official difference: 'have to' is used of an external command and 'must' is used of a command or feeling of necessity from within oneself.
  • e, use one when the true situation is in the other).
  • In addition, there is no past form for 'must' (in the sense of command), so we must use 'had to' synonymously in that case: I have to attend class today.
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2 Answers
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Anonymous?Have to? is used for the opinion from the outside and?must? has been heard use to the thing that I thought of
You have a rough idea of the official difference: 'have to' is used of an external command and 'must' is used of a command or feeling of necessity from within oneself.

Keep in mind, however, that (1) some native speakers do not diffe
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Thank you. I was good very much.

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