MUST, MUST NOT, CAN'T + You must study everyday. He must work on Sunday. - He must not get up late. You can't eat in the classroom. You cannot eat in the classroom. USE: Use must to talk about rules and obligations. You must clean your bedroom. Use can't/must not to say something is prohibited. You must not eat in class.
In English, we use must and have to to express a strong rule or law. In this grammar lesson, I will teach you about the modal verbs "must" and "have to" in both their negative and positive forms. In the positive form, their function is the same, but their subject-verb agreement is different. In the negative form, we use "don't have
Yes a big difference. Cannot die means the person is immortal and incapable of death. Must not die means that they are mortal, thus very capable of death and the mission requires you to keep them alive. As Mitch's answer shows, "cannot" is ambiguous here. In this setting they are pretty much the same. Language can have a literal meaning, a
VoWBVr. 0tpeljjyxt.pages.dev/2420tpeljjyxt.pages.dev/3540tpeljjyxt.pages.dev/430tpeljjyxt.pages.dev/4400tpeljjyxt.pages.dev/870tpeljjyxt.pages.dev/4520tpeljjyxt.pages.dev/4930tpeljjyxt.pages.dev/247
use of must and must not