Reading Theme:
I Need to Finish This Report by Friday: Usage Guide
Meaning 1:Must complete report before Friday (I need to finish this report by Friday)
I need to finish this report by Friday
/aɪ niːd tə ˈfɪnɪʃ ðɪs rɪˈpɔːrt baɪ ˈfraɪdeɪ/
sentence
This sentence expresses a strong necessity. It means the speaker must complete writing the report before Friday comes.
Must complete report before Friday
➕
/mʌst kəmˈpliːt rɪˈpɔːrt bɪˈfɔːr ˈfraɪdeɪ/
sentence
This phrase expresses a strong obligation to finalize a written document before the end of the work week.
📘 Details & Usage
📖 Root Explanation
Need (OE nēodian), finish (L finire), report (L reportāre), Friday (OE Frīġedæġ).
💡 Mnemonic
Picture a finish line on a Friday calendar; you must cross it before the week ends.
📖 Example
My manager just reminded me that I need to finish this report by Friday for the Monday meeting.
My manager just reminded me that I must complete the report before Friday for the Monday meeting.
🔗 Collocations
need to finish – must complete
finish by Friday – complete before Friday
report deadline – the due date for a report
🔄 Synonyms
I must finish this report by Friday (sentence) – Expresses necessity with the modal verb 'must'.
I have to complete this report before Friday (sentence) – Uses 'have to' to indicate external obligation.
I am required to finish this report by Friday (sentence) – Formal phrasing emphasizing a requirement.
🚫 Antonyms
I can delay this report until next week (sentence) – Expresses permission to postpone.
I don't need to finish this report by Friday (sentence) – Negates the necessity.
I have already completed this report (sentence) – Indicates the action is done.
🌱 Derivatives
unfinished (adj.) – not completed
reportable (adj.) – that must be reported
needful (adj.) – necessary
📖 Cultural Story
The phrase reflects modern workplace deadlines. 'Deadline' originated in 19th-century prisons; now common in business English to emphasize time constraints.
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