0
Silak12 Posted 14 years ago
Grammar

Is "must" here correct

Hye everyone! Could you please tell me if I can use "must" like this? I mean what sense "must" make here.
I know We use "might" when there is less probability of something and "must" when there is strong probability.
When we use "might" in this sentence'(He might love you) means ( I am not sure whether he loves you or he doesn't) it gives the present indefinite sense. or future(doesn't it?)
But when we use "must" as we are sure about what we are saying now (in a same sentence)."He must love you"
Does this also giving the present indefinite sense or future or we should say"He must be loving you"
Actually the real thing that is getting perplexed for me is "What do we use with 'must' to show that we are sure about something which is "happening in present time like present indefinitely" like in the case of might.
"He must do this"(Is this mean that we are sure that he does this)
I will be very thankful if you please help me.
Thanks!
  

Top answer

I cannot even find the sentence you are talking about. Try to control yourself, and write clearly and concisely about your problem.

  • I cannot even find the sentence you are talking about.
  • Try to control yourself, and write clearly and concisely about your problem.
Free · every Monday

Get the Weekly English Kit 📬

New words, one handy idiom, and a 2-minute quiz — delivered to your inbox to keep your streak alive.

4 Answers
0
I cannot even find the sentence you are talking about. Try to control yourself, and write clearly and concisely about your problem.
0
silak12He must love you
Hi,
Your question is indeed not concise. In future, try to pose your question as succinctly as you can.
Let me allay your worries about this sentence. He must love you = it is highly likely that he loves you;
it sounds very reasonable. It is one of the common usages of this modal verb.

Regards
0
Sorry for doing this I will not do this in future, actually I didn't know I was being very meaningless

Related Questions