Need is used both as an ordinary verb and as an auxiliary verb. As an ordinary verb need is used in the sense of require. The ordinary verb need has -s in the third person singular. Questions and negatives are made with do. >>> Read More.
Must doesn’t change its form, whatever be its tense or the number and person of its subject. It can refer to the present or future. You must do this now. (Present) He must pay damages. (Future) You must file a petition. (Future)
O. Henry's short story “One Thousand Dollars” opens with a brief and polite conversation between a young man and a lawyer. The lawyer offers the young man one thousand dollars, his apparent inheritance from a recently deceased uncle. “Young Gillian,” the young man in question, chuckles at the peculiar and specific amount of his inheritance. He marvels that, had his uncle bestowed a much larger or a much smaller amount of money upon him, he would better understand the bequest. As it stands, however, he is puzzled and stunned by the legacy of one thousand dollars exactly.
Write Right: Paragraph to Essay is a three-level writing series for intermediate to high intermediate students. Each unit takes a process writing approach in order to encourage students to independently brainstorm, outline, draft, revise, and edit their own writing. As students move through the series, they will master paragraph writing and various writing skills in order to write short essays by the end.
In Book 3, students will expand on what they have learned about paragraph writing to write short essays on topics that require more serious thinking.