Yes, it is. The word 'must' is an auxiliary verb and the word 'not' is an adverb used to modify the verb.
Example:
You must not disturb grandma while she's napping.
You mustn't disturb grandma while she's napping.
Expansion is the antonym for contraction.
The contraction is mustn't.The word 'must' is an auxiliary verb and the word 'not' is an adverb used to modify the verb.Example:You must not disturb grandma while she's napping.You mustn't disturb grandma while she's napping.
The contraction for would not is wouldn't.He would not go home. He wouldn't go home.
Yes
No. Can't is a contraction of "cannot" which pairs an auxiliary verb (can) with an adverb (not).
The contraction mustn't means "must not."
The contraction is mustn't (mŭs'ənt)Contraction of must not.
The contraction made from "must" and "not" is "mustn't".
mustn't
Must be "where'll".
Shan't is the contraction of "shall" and "not".
The contraction "mustn't" means "must not." Must is an auxiliary verb and not is an adverb.
The contraction of "must not" is spelled mustn't (a prohibition, only used in present tenses).As with other contractions of "not", the apostrophe replaces the missing O.
Mustn't.
"Mustn't" is the contraction. It is a contraction of "must not." Does anyone think it is a useful contraction? It seems a little informal to me, but I guess we mustn't get carried away with formalism.
Mustn't.
The contraction of "must have" is "must've" -- the apostrophe takes the place of the letters that have been deleted.