Yes, you can.
If you say, 'He must not be at home' most people would assume you'd tried unsuccessfully to contact him at his home. It's perfectly correct, in that context.
'He might not be at home' would be taken to mean you don't know whether he's at home but haven't tried to reach him there.
'He may not be at home' would be taken to mean the same as 'He might not be at home', though some pedants might insist it means 'He is not allowed to be at home.'
If you go ahead and say, 'He must not be at home', I'd say you must be right, though I don't mean 'I will not allow you to be wrong'.
He is not at home.
You can say "they must" in French as "ils doivent."
No, it is not correct.It is correct to say "back home"
You can say "Dobrodošli kući" in Bosnian, which translates to "Welcome home."
To say "going home" in Cajun French, you can say "aller chez nous".
"Karibu kumusha" is how you say welcome home in Shona.
It must be in your neighbor's home. I say just spray them all and say "burn! Burn to hell!".
That first he must journey to the land of the dead, Hanes,and consult the prophet Tiresias.
The correct way to say that phrase is "He must have."
i will not say to you the answer because this is your home work you who must do it so please donot cheat ur home work again if you cheat it now in the exam you will fail
'Home' is translated to 'Thuis' in dutch. However there are a few different translations when it comes to different situations. When you say: 'I am home' you say 'Ik ben thuis'. But when you say: 'I have a home' you say 'Ik heb een huis'. In the second sentence 'home' becomes 'huis'. To be more specific: When you mean the building of a home you say: 'Huis'. When you talk about a 'home sweet home'-home you say 'thuis'. ------- :)
If your trying to say my home, you say, chez moi.
No, it is 'you must start driving home'. Hope I helped.
Giving a ride is an act of kindness. For someone to like you he/she must say it out.
It depends on the rest of the sentence. For example, it is correct to say Come see me at home, or You will find my sister and me at home. You could say "I'm at home" just "Me at home" is incomplete.
It is not grammatically correct to say ' you go to home'. Instead you should leave out the word to, and say 'you, go home'.
No, it is not correct.It is correct to say "back home"
You can only tell the boy that it is fine with you, but you must fix the time of returning home , and that we could go for a movie, show, or to Barista.