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motive, means, and opportunity
If someone says that they cannot do without it means that they really think that they must have it.
It means that the cause must come before the effect. For example, the stoplight turns red (cause) before the car stops (effect), so the cause is written before the effect. Linear order.
When Vera says "in the meantime you must try and put up with me". She really means she is about to trick him but the words she used means that you must try to put with her.
U must get 5,000 career receiving yards
"Probable cause" is a term in law enforcement that means the authorities must have reasonable grounds before conducting a search or pressing a charge.
you must have a powerful telescope to do it
Yes it does cause i means you would do good with your grades because you must be passing all your classes to do it
I think it must be a shiny shade in a shiny blade this statement has often use in poetry it means something really shiny in a shiny silver.
Yes, which means you must be careful when using it. One can die by heart attack from plastic surgery
Adjectives that describe things you really must have and those things you really must do are essential or necessary.
More than likely, you don't really like him. Just leave him alone, quit being with him, if you really don't like him, he must do something wrong to cause these feelings.