MUST vs OUGHT: NOUN
- The unfermented or fermenting juice expressed from fruit, especially grapes.
- The quality or condition of being stale or musty.
- Musk.
- A condition of strong nervous excitement or frenzy to which elephants are subject, the paroxysms being marked by dangerous irascibility.
- New wine; the unfermented juice as pressed from the grape.
- . The stage or condition of newness: said of wine.
- The pulp of potatoes prepared for fermentation.
- Mold or moldiness; fustiness.
- The quality of smelling or tasting old or stale or mouldy
- Something that is absolutely required or indispensable.
- A necessary or essential thing
- Something that exhibits the property of being stale or musty
- Fruit juice that will ferment or has fermented, usually grapes
- Grape juice before or during fermentation
- Something that is mandatory or required
- A time during which male elephants exhibit increased levels of sexual activity and aggressiveness (also musth)
- Mustiness.
- The expressed juice of the grape, or other fruit, before fermentation.
- A statement of what ought to be the case as contrasted to what is the case.
- Alternative spelling of aught. cipher, zero, nought.
- See aught.
- Nought; a cipher.
- Possession: same as aught.
MUST vs OUGHT: ADJECTIVE
- Being in a condition of dangerous frenzy, usually connected with sexual excitement; -- said of adult male elephants which become so at irregular intervals, typicaly due to increased testosterone levels.
- Highly recommended
- N/A
MUST vs OUGHT: VERB
- To do as a requirement; indicates that the sentence subject is required as an imperative or directive to execute the sentence predicate, with failure to do so resulting in a negative consequence
- To make musty.
- To become musty.
- To do with certainty; indicates that the speaker is certain that the subject will have executed the predicate
- To make musty; to become musty.
- Simple past of owe.
- Indicating duty or obligation.
- Indicating advisability or prudence.
- Indicating desirability.
- Indicating likelihood or probability.
MUST vs OUGHT: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- To be obliged or required by morality, law, or custom.
- To be compelled, as by a physical necessity or requirement.
- Used to express a command or admonition.
- To be determined to; have as a fixed resolve.
- Used to indicate inevitability or certainty.
- Used to indicate logical probability or presumptive certainty.
- To be required or obliged to go.
- N/A
MUST vs OUGHT: ADVERB
- N/A
- Alternative spelling of aught. at all, to any degree.
MUST vs OUGHT: PRONOUN
- N/A
- Alternative spelling of aught. anything
MUST vs OUGHT: OTHER WORD TYPES
- Frenzied; in the state of madness known as must: as, a must elephant.
- To be obliged; to be necessitated; -- expressing either physical or moral necessity
- To be morally required; to be necessary or essential to a certain quality, character, end, or result
- To make stale and moldy; make musty or sour.
- To grow stale and moldy; contract a sour or musty smell.
- To be obliged; be necessarily compelled; be bound or required by physical or moral necessity, or by express command or prohibition, or by the imperative requirements of safety or interest; be necessary or inevitable as a condition or conclusion: as, a man must eat to live; we must obey the laws; you must not delay.
- Same as aught. Compare naught, nought.
- Owed; the preterit and past participle of the verb owe, to be indebted or obliged.
- To be held or bound in duty or moral obligation.
- To be fit or expedient in a moral view; be a natural or expected consequence, result, effect, etc.
- To be necessary or advisable; behoove.
- To befit: used impersonally.
- = Syn. 3-5. Ought, Should. Ought is the stronger, expressing especially obligations of duty, with some weaker use in expressing interest or necessity: as, you ought to know, if any one does. Should sometimes expresses duty: as, we should be careful of others' feelings; but generally expresses propriety, expediency, etc.: as, we should dot our i's and cross our t's.
- Owned; the preterit of the verb owe, to possess, own. See owe.
- Was or were under obligation to pay; owed.
- Owned; possessed.
- To be bound in duty or by moral obligation.
- To be necessary, fit, becoming, or expedient; to behoove; -- in this sense formerly sometimes used impersonally or without a subject expressed.
- (auxiliary verb) Used to indicate probability or likelihood.
- (auxiliary verb) Used to indicate desirability.
- (auxiliary verb) Used to indicate advisability or prudence.
- (auxiliary verb) Used to indicate obligation or duty.
MUST vs OUGHT: RELATED WORDS
- Requirement, Oughta, Gotta, Needed, Necessary, Imperative, Requires, Needs, Required, Have got, Essential, Have, Need, Ought, Should
- Want, Zero, Antinomy, Gotta, Will, Shall, Could, Oughta, Would, Might, Can, Had better, Need, Must, Should
MUST vs OUGHT: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Let, Requirement, Oughta, Gotta, Needed, Necessary, Imperative, Needs, Required, Have got, Essential, Have, Need, Ought, Should
- Behooves, Want, Zero, Antinomy, Gotta, Will, Shall, Could, Oughta, Would, Might, Can, Need, Must, Should
MUST vs OUGHT: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- Money and property must be accounted for, and goods and services must be procured using appropriate federal acquisition regulations.
- The voucher must be requested at least six hours before the scheduled departure and must be used for travel departing no later than Nov.
- Tactical Objective, they must instead generate two Tactical Objectives and their opponent selects which one they must keep.
- Since each component of the residency must be accredited by its respective discipline, the faculty must meet the requirements for their specialty.
- The pursuit must commence in the area where the violation was committed, and must be continuous.
- Student must be at least a rising Junior and must have completed one full semester at Dallas Christian College.
- Thus, the partner must pass, and the opponents must guess.
- All registered owners must sign the form, and if mailing it in, all signatures must be notarized.
- The sheets must be free from creases and cracks; they must not be folded.
- Bank statements must be translated into English and funds must reflect the US currency equivalency.
- The Ukrainians ought to investigate it and to the extent it happened here in the US, we ought to be investigating it.
- Because we ought to live in the world as Christians, we ought to evaluate moral issues as Christians.
- For example at a banquet do not say how a man ought to eat, but eat as you ought to eat.
- But those times, the court ought to feel hesitant about doing that and ought to make sure that it has gotten it right.
- It is prescriptive in the sense that it involves deciding what we ought to do, how we ought to live and why.
- The Senate, therefore, ought to be this body; and to answer these purposes, they ought to have permanency and stability.
- Constitution ought to be interpreted, how statutes should be read, and what judges ought to do in the face of manifest injustice.
- Christians ought to stay away from pagan learning of all sorts in the same way they ought to avoid pagan religious practices.
- Thorne takes a more targeted view by relying on prescriptive reasoning to determine what ought and ought not be done.
- The field of ethics addresses how we ought to treat each other, how we ought to act, what we ought to do, and why.
MUST vs OUGHT: QUESTIONS
- What instrument must be disassembled for sterilization?
- Which instruments and equipment must be sterilized?
- Why must must invest in 3 bedroom apartments in Dwarka Delhi?
- What must the people who create the advertisements must be aware of?
- What are must must-do exercises for forward head posture and kyphosis?
- What does we must accept finite disappointment but must never lose?
- Why must the animated God in this cartoon must look down?
- Why must reactant molecules must collide in a specific orientation?
- What are the must must-have 3 of strategic planning?
- Is there an exercise to practice must must must not?
- What does it mean when someone says I ought to know?
- What is the meaning of every citizen ought to help?
- What every goddess ought to know about slippery elm bark?
- How to account for supererogation without giving up the ought?
- What you ought to know about thyroid problems in cats?
- Is the ought-to L2 self a valid motivational construct?
- Why are ought and need often called semi-modal verbs?
- What every woman ought to know about love and marriage?
- What should Everybody Ought to know about flower water?
- Is there a distinction between an ought-to and an anti-ought-to L2 self?