Course Content
English Grammar Mastery: From Foundations to Fluency

1. Lesson Overview

In this lesson, you will learn how the modal verb must and the semi-modal expressions have to and had to express obligation and necessity.

These structures allow speakers to describe rules, duties, requirements, and unavoidable situations.

Example:

Researchers must follow ethical guidelines.
(strong obligation)

Researchers have to submit the report before the deadline.
(external requirement)

Understanding the differences between these structures helps learners express levels of obligation and necessity accurately.

By the end of this lesson, you will be able to:

  • explain how must expresses strong obligation

  • understand how have to expresses external necessity

  • distinguish between must and have to

  • use had to correctly when referring to past necessity


2. Concept Introduction

Consider the following sentences:

Students must follow laboratory safety rules.

Students have to follow laboratory safety rules.

Both sentences express obligation, but the source of the obligation differs.

Structure Meaning
must obligation from the speaker or authority
have to obligation caused by external rules or circumstances

Example:

You must wear protective equipment.
(strong instruction)

You have to wear protective equipment because the laboratory rules require it.


3. Core Explanation

Modal verbs expressing obligation describe things that are necessary or required.

Must – Strong Obligation

Must expresses strong obligation, duty, or necessity, often coming from the speaker, authority, or moral rule.

Example:

Researchers must follow ethical standards.

It often indicates rules, instructions, or strong recommendations.


Have to – External Necessity

Have to expresses obligation caused by external circumstances, such as rules, schedules, or practical situations.

Example:

Students have to submit the report by Friday.

The obligation comes from an external requirement, not necessarily the speaker.


Had to – Past Necessity

When referring to past necessity, English normally uses had to, not must.

Example:

The researchers had to repeat the experiment.

This indicates something that was necessary in the past.


4. Rule Table

Must for Obligation

Structure Example
subject + must + base verb Researchers must follow safety rules.

Have to for External Necessity

Structure Example
subject + have/has to + base verb Students have to submit the report.

Had to for Past Necessity

Structure Example
subject + had to + base verb The team had to repeat the experiment.

Negative Forms

Structure Meaning Example
must not prohibition You must not enter the laboratory.
do not have to lack of necessity You do not have to attend the meeting.

5. Usage

1. Strong obligation

Example:

Researchers must report accurate results.


2. Rules and regulations

Example:

Students must wear protective equipment.


3. External necessity

Example:

Researchers have to submit the report by Monday.


4. Past obligation

Example:

The technician had to repair the equipment.


5. Lack of necessity

Example:

You do not have to complete the task today.


6. Signal Words

Certain contexts commonly indicate obligation or necessity.

Expression Example
rule Students must follow the rules.
requirement Researchers have to meet the requirements.
obligation Scientists must report accurate findings.
necessary It is necessary to follow safety procedures.
requirement The system has to be tested regularly.

These expressions often accompany modal verbs expressing duty or obligation.


7. Special Cases

Must Not vs Do Not Have To

These structures have very different meanings.

Structure Meaning Example
must not prohibition You must not enter the laboratory.
do not have to not necessary You do not have to attend the meeting.

Example:

You must not touch the equipment.
(prohibited)

You do not have to touch the equipment.
(not required)


Questions with “Have to”

Questions about necessity usually use do-support.

Example:

Do students have to complete the assignment today?


8. Additional Notes

Modal verbs expressing obligation are common in instructions, regulations, academic policies, and formal writing.

Example:

Participants must provide accurate information during the study.

In formal contexts, must often indicates official rules or requirements.


9. Common Errors

⚠ Using must for past necessity

Incorrect:
The researchers must repeat the experiment yesterday.

Correct:
The researchers had to repeat the experiment yesterday.

Explanation:
Past necessity uses had to, not must.


⚠ Confusing prohibition and lack of necessity

Incorrect:
You must not attend the meeting tomorrow.
(if meaning “not necessary”)

Correct:
You do not have to attend the meeting tomorrow.

Explanation:
Must not means prohibited, not optional.


⚠ Adding “to” after must

Incorrect:
Researchers must to follow the procedure.

Correct:
Researchers must follow the procedure.

Explanation:
Modal verbs are followed by the base verb without “to.”


⚠ Incorrect subject–verb structure

Incorrect:
She must follows the instructions.

Correct:
She must follow the instructions.

Explanation:
The verb after a modal must be base form.


⚠ Incorrect negative form

Incorrect:
Students must not to submit the report late.

Correct:
Students must not submit the report late.

Explanation:
Modal verbs are followed by the base verb.


10. Lesson Mastery

After completing this lesson, you should now be able to:

✅ explain how must expresses strong obligation
✅ understand how have to expresses external necessity
✅ distinguish between must and have to
✅ use had to correctly to describe past necessity

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