two friends were camping together of a river. their names were jim and tim. tim was very lazy boy. on the first evening of their holiday, jim said to tim, "here’s some money. go and buy some meat."
"i’m too tired," answered tim. "you go." so jim went to buy the meat.
when he came back, he told tim that he must cook it. but tim explained, "no, i’m not good at cooking. you must do it." so jim fried the meat. than jim cut the bread as tom did not want to do it. after that he offered his friend brung some water.this time tim replied: "no, i don’t want to get my clothes dirty" .so jim got the water.
at last the meat was ready and jim invited tim to eat it.
"well, i can do that," - agreed tim. "i don’t like saying “no” all the time."
two friends were camping together of a river. their names were jim and tim. tim was very lazy boy. on the first evening of their holiday, jim said to tim, "here’s some money. go and buy some meat."
"i’m too tired," answered tim. "you go." so jim went to buy the meat.
when he came back, he told tim that he must cook it. but tim explained, "no, i’m not good at cooking. you must do it." so jim fried the meat. than jim cut the bread as tom did not want to do it. after that he offered his friend brung some water.this time tim replied: "no, i don’t want to get my clothes dirty" .so jim got the water.
at last the meat was ready and jim invited tim to eat it.
"well, i can do that," - agreed tim. "i don’t like saying “no” all the time."
Answer 1. had to
Answer 2. had to
Объяснение:
Remember!
We use must when we talk about necessity and rules. It is used in present.
Had to is used in past. We use it when someone is obliged to. We use it when we can’t use must.
1. Must can be replaced by have to with little difference in meaning:
2. Have to is a more informal while Must is mostly used in written orders or instructions.
3. When we are mentioning someone else's obligations, we use have to.
4. For questions it is more common to use have to instead of Must (which sounds very formal).
5. The past tense of Must is Had to:
Mustn't and Don't have to
Mustn't is a negative obligation (= it is important that you do NOT do something) while don't have to is an absence of obligation.
Mustn't = it is prohibited; it is not allowed
Don't have to = no obligation; you are not required to do something, especially if you don't want to.