Course Content
English Grammar Mastery: From Foundations to Fluency

1. Lesson Overview

In this lesson, you will study the modal expressions must, have to, and had to, which are commonly used to express obligation, necessity, and requirement.

These expressions allow speakers and writers to indicate that an action is required, compulsory, or necessary. However, they are used in slightly different contexts depending on whether the obligation is internal (the speaker’s judgement) or external (rules, laws, or circumstances).

Understanding the differences between must, have to, and had to helps learners communicate requirements and obligations clearly.

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

  • use must to express strong obligation

  • use have to to describe external necessity

  • use had to to describe past obligation

  • distinguish between must and have to


2. Concept Introduction

Consider the following sentences:

You must wear protective equipment in the laboratory.
Researchers have to follow safety regulations.

Sentence Meaning
must wear protective equipment strong obligation
have to follow regulations requirement based on rules

Another example:

The technician had to repair the system before the experiment continued.

This sentence describes necessity in the past.


3. Core Explanation

Modal verbs expressing obligation indicate that an action is necessary or required.

Expression Meaning
must strong obligation or rule
have to obligation due to external circumstances
had to past necessity

Example:

Researchers must record accurate data.

This sentence expresses strong necessity or duty.

Example:

Students have to complete the assignment before the deadline.

Here the obligation comes from external requirements.


4. Rule Table

Must

Structure Example
subject + must + base verb You must follow the instructions.

Negative:

Structure Example
subject + must not + base verb You must not enter the laboratory.

Example:

You must not touch the equipment without permission.


Have To

Structure Example
subject + have/has to + base verb She has to complete the report.

Negative:

Structure Example
subject + do/does not have to + base verb She does not have to attend the meeting.

Example:

Students do not have to submit the assignment today.


Had To (Past Obligation)

Structure Example
subject + had to + base verb She had to finish the report yesterday.

Example:

The technician had to repair the system before the experiment started.


5. Usage

1. Strong obligation (must)

Example:

Researchers must follow ethical guidelines.


2. Rules and regulations

Example:

Employees have to follow safety procedures.


3. External necessity

Example:

Students have to submit their assignments by Friday.


4. Past necessity

Example:

The engineers had to redesign the system after the failure.


5. Logical necessity

Example:

The results must be correct.

This expresses strong logical certainty.


6. Signal Words

Modal verbs expressing obligation often appear with expressions related to rules, requirements, or necessity.

Expression Example
required Students are required to submit the assignment.
necessary It is necessary to follow the instructions.
compulsory Attendance is compulsory.
essential It is essential to record accurate data.
mandatory Protective equipment is mandatory.

These expressions reinforce the idea of necessity or obligation.


7. Special Cases

Must vs Have To

Must Have To
internal obligation external obligation
speaker’s authority rules or circumstances

Example:

I must finish this report tonight.
(personal decision)

I have to finish this report tonight.
(requirement from work)


Negative Meaning

Structure Meaning
must not prohibition
do not have to lack of necessity

Example:

You must not enter this area.
(prohibition)

You do not have to attend the meeting.
(optional)


8. Additional Notes

In spoken English, have to is often more common than must when referring to everyday obligations.

Example:

I have to attend the meeting tomorrow.

In formal instructions, however, must is frequently used.

Example:

All participants must follow safety procedures.


9. Common Errors

⚠ Adding “to” after must

Incorrect:
You must to finish the report.

Correct:
You must finish the report.

Explanation:
Must is followed directly by the base verb.


⚠ Incorrect negative form

Incorrect:
You mustn’t to enter the laboratory.

Correct:
You mustn’t enter the laboratory.

Explanation:
The verb after mustn’t remains in the base form.


⚠ Incorrect past form

Incorrect:
She must finish the report yesterday.

Correct:
She had to finish the report yesterday.

Explanation:
Must does not have a past tense form; use had to.


⚠ Confusing prohibition and absence of obligation

Incorrect:
You mustn’t attend the meeting.

Correct:
You do not have to attend the meeting.

Explanation:
Mustn’t means prohibition, not optionality.


⚠ Incorrect question structure

Incorrect:
Do you must follow the rules?

Correct:
Must you follow the rules?

Explanation:
Modal verbs form questions without “do.”


10. Lesson Mastery

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

✅ use must to express strong obligation
✅ use have to to describe external necessity
✅ use had to to describe past obligation
✅ distinguish between prohibition and absence of obligation

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