I have to leave now. :tick:
I have got to leave now. :tick:
I got to leave now. :cross:
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Are all of the three sentences interchangeable?
If I omit 'now' in the third sentence, then is it correct?The third is grammatically incorrect. You will hear "I gotta leave now" but it's non-standard and should only be written when reporting direct speech. It wouldn't be written as "got to" in that situation, only as "gotta".
No. To have got to is another way to say to have to. You can't omit the helping verb have in formal written English.If I omit 'now' in the third sentence, then is it correct?
I got to leave.
So I got to go is OK in spoken English, but not correct in formal written English. Am I right?No. To have got to is another way to say to have to. You can't omit the helping verb have in formal written English.
In American spoken English, you will often hear I got to go rather than I gotta go. The bolded word is heavily emphasized, and to is slurred. That conveys more urgency than I gotta go.
Hi, friendsSo I got to go is OK in spoken English, but not correct in formal written English. Am I right?
I fixed two typos in your reply. Thank you."I got to leave" could also mean that you received permission to leave.
When we were caught in the school that night, I got to leave because my dad is on the school board, but the other kids had to stay there and have their parents come pick them up.
The bank robber took seven of us as hostages, but I got to leave because I was pregnant and he took pity on me.
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