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Needconjugated with will/shall, do/does/didetc. takes the full infinitive and is sometimes referred to as need to.

149Absence of obligation: forms

  Speaker's authority External authority  
Future need not shan't/won 't need to shan 't/won 't have to  
Present need not don 't/doesn 't need to don 't/doesn 't have to haven 't/hasn 't got to  
Past (see 150 B) didn 't need to didn 't have to hadn 't got to  
       

But see 148 C above for needn't in indirect speech.

shan 't/won't need to = shan 't/won't have to

don 't/doesn't need to = don 't/doesn't have to

didn't need to = didn't have to (but didn't have to is the more

usual form)

There are no exact need equivalents of haven 't/hasn't got to and hadn't

got to as can be seen from the table.

150Difference between need notand the other forms A 1 As already stated, need notexpresses the speaker's authority or advice:

You needn't write me another cheque. Just change the date and

initial it.

I'm in no hurry. He needn't send it by air. He can send it by sea.

You needn't do it by hand. I'll lend you my machine.

You needn't call me Mr Jones. We all use first names here.

COLLEGE LECTURER: You needn't type your essays but you must write

legibly.

2 The other forms express external authority:

Tom doesn't have to wear uniform at school.

We don't have to type our essays but we have to write legibly.

When I'm an old age pensioner I won't have to pay any more

bus fares.

Ann hasn 't got to go/doesn 't have to go to this lecture. Attendance

is optional.

When I have a telephone of my own I won't have to waste time

waiting outside these wretched telephone boxes.

Ann doesn 't have to cook for herself. She works at a hotel and gets

all her meals there.

3 Sometimes, however, need notcan be used for external authority also, as an alternative to won't/don't need to or won't/don't have

to forms. This is particularly common in the first person:

/ needn 't type/I won 't/don 't have to type this report today. Mr Jones

said that there was no hurry about it.

Note, however, that though it is possible to use need notfor a future habitual action:

I'm retiring. After Friday I need never go to the office again. it is not possible to use it for a present habitual action:

/ don't have to queue for my bus. I get on at the terminus, (need

not could not be used here.)

B Past

Here the distinction between the speaker's authority and external authority disappears, and we have a choice of three forms: didn't have to, didn't need to and hadn't got to.There is no difference in meaning, but hadn't got tois not normally used for habitual actions. didn't have tois the most usual form:

7 didn 't have to wait long. He was only a few minutes late.

When he was at university he didn't have to/need to pay anything for

his keep, for he stayed with his uncle.

151 must, have to and needin the interrogative

Asking the authority External authority
Future must I? etc. shall I/we have to? shall I/we need to?
need I? etc. will he have to? etc. will he need to? etc.
Present must I? etc. do I/we have to? do I/we need to?
need I? etc. does he have to? etc. does he need to? etc.
  have I/we (got) to?
  has he (got) to? etc.
Past did he have to? etc.
  did he need to? etc.
  had he got to? etc.

Both need?and must?imply that the person addressed is the authority concerned, need?also implies that the speaker is hoping for a negative answer: Must I go, mother? and Need I go, mother? mean the same, but in the second question the speaker is hoping that his mother will say No. The other interrogative form of need, do I need?etc., can be used similarly. Note possible answers:



Shall I have to go? ~ Yes, you will/No, you won't.

Have I got to go? ~ Yes, you have/No, you haven't.

Does he have to go? ~ Yes, he does/No, he doesn't.

Need I go? ~ Yes, you must/No, you needn't.

Must I go? ~ Yes, you must/No, you needn't.

152 needn't+ perfect infinitive

This structure is used to express an unnecessary action which was

nevertheless performed:

7 needn't have written to him because he phoned me shortly

afterwards. (But I had written, thus wasting my time.)

You needn't have brought your umbrella for we are going by car.

(You brought your umbrella unnecessarily.)

He needn't have left home at 6.00; the train doesn't start till 7.30.

(So he will have an hour to wait.)

153 needn't have (done)compared with didn't have/ need (to do)

A needn't have done:no obligation but action performed (unnecessarily), i.e. time wasted:

You needn't have watered the flowers, for it is going to rain. (You

wasted your time.)

You needn't have written such a long essay. The teacher only asked

for 300 words, and you have written 600.

He needn't have bought such a large house. His wife would have been

quite happy in a cottage, (waste of money)

You needn't have carried all these parcels yourself. The shop would

have delivered them if you had asked them.

B didn't have/need to do:no obligation, and normally no action:

I didn't have to translate it for him for he understands Dutch.

I didn't have to cut the grass myself. My brother did it. (no obligation

and no action)

Some people do use didn't have to/didn't need tofor actions which were performed. The have or needis then usually stressed: You didn't \have to give him my name would then mean 'It wasn't necessary to give him my name, but you gave it to him'. But the student is advised to use needn't have+ past participle when an unnecessary-action was performed:

You needn't have given him my name.

154 needn't, could and should +perfect infinitive

A needn't+ perfect infinitive is often combined with could+ perfect infinitive. The use of this combination is best shown by examples:

/ wanted a copy of the letter, so I typed it twice. ~ You needn't have

typed it twice. You could have used a carbon.

I walked up six flights of stairs. ~ You needn't have walked up; you

could have taken the lift.

She stood in a queue to get an Underground ticket. ~ But she

needn 't have stood in a queue. She could have got a ticket from the

machine.

B needn't haveand should havecompared

shouldor ought tocould be used instead of needor couldin all the

examples in A above:

She shouldn 't hare stood in a queue. She should have got tickets from

the machine. But there is a difference in meaning:

She shouldn't have stood in a queue. (It was wrong or foolish of her

to stand in a queue.)

She needn't have stood in a queue. (It was not necessary to do this,

but she did it.)

shouldn't have(done) implies criticism. needn't have(done) does not imply criticism.

155 to needas an ordinary verb, meaning 'require'

As shown in 149, needcan be conjugated as an ordinary verb. It then

has the normal regular forms, but no continuous tense.

to needcan be used with an infinitive or with a noun/pronoun object:

/ need to know the exact size.

How much money do you need? I need £5.

to needcan also be used with the passive infinitive or the gerund in such sentences as:

Your hair needs to be cut/needs cutting.

The windows need to be washed/need icashing. want+ gerund can be used instead of needhere:

Your hair wants cutting.


Date: 2015-12-18; view: 832


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