Must & Mustn’t (Rules and Prohibition)

A2 (Elementary)Grammar

Must & Mustn’t (Rules and Prohibition)

Use must for strong obligation and mustn't for prohibition — and learn the key difference between mustn't (forbidden) and don't have to (optional). A2 grammar with 20 questions.

We use must for strong obligation and important rules, and mustn’t for prohibition — things that are not allowed. “You must wear a seatbelt.” “You mustn’t use your phone in the exam.”

How to make it: must + base verb

Like other modals, must never changes and takes the base verb — no -s, no “to.”

Form Example
Positive You must be quiet in the library.
Negative You mustn’t (must not) be late.
Same for everyone“She must go,” never “She musts go” or “She must to go.”

The big contrast: mustn’t vs don’t have to

This is the key point of the lesson. These two look similar but mean opposite things.

Phrase Meaning
mustn’t It is forbidden — do NOT do it.
don’t have to It is optional — you can choose.
  • You mustn’t smoke here. (it is forbidden)
  • You don’t have to smoke. (you can choose not to — it’s optional)

must vs have to

Both express obligation and are often interchangeable. A small guide: must often feels like the speaker’s own strong feeling or a written rule; have to often points to an outside rule. At A2, you can use either for obligation.

  • I must finish this today. (I feel it is important)
  • I have to wear a uniform. (it’s the school’s rule)
Tutor tip for Arabic speakersDon’t confuse the two negatives! mustn’t = forbidden (“you mustn’t do it”), but don’t have to = not necessary (“you can if you want”). And never add “to” after must: not “must to go” but “must go.”
Common mistakes

  • You must to wear a seatbelt.You must wear a seatbelt.
  • She musts study.She must study.
  • You mustn’t bring a laptop. (when it’s simply optional) → You don’t have to bring a laptop.

Practise must and mustn’t with the 20 questions below — the final lesson of the A2 grammar course!

Check your understanding

Answer the questions below. You will see instantly if you are right.

1."You ___ wear a seatbelt." (strong rule)
must + base verb.
2."You ___ use your phone in the exam." (forbidden)
forbidden → mustn't.
3.Which is correct?
must + base verb, no "to".
4.Which is correct?
must never adds -s.
5."mustn't" means:
mustn't = forbidden.
6."don't have to" means:
optional / not necessary.
7."You ___ smoke here." (it is forbidden)
forbidden → mustn't.
8."You ___ smoke." (you can choose not to)
optional → don't have to.
9."You ___ be quiet in the library." (rule)
rule → must.
10."He ___ go now — it's very important."
must (same for he).
11.Which means "it is forbidden"?
mustn't = forbidden.
12."Students ___ talk during the test." (not allowed)
not allowed → mustn't.
13."You ___ bring a gift — it's optional."
optional → don't have to.
14."I ___ finish this today." (I feel it is important)
must (speaker's strong feeling).
15.Which is correct?
optional → don't have to.
16."We ___ be late — the test starts at 9 sharp."
forbidden/avoid → mustn't.
17."Visitors ___ touch the paintings." (forbidden)
mustn't touch.
18."You ___ pay to enter — it's free."
not necessary → don't have to.
19.After "must", the verb is:
must + base verb.
20.Choose the full correct sentence:
mustn't + base verb: be.

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