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müsstest

Müsstest is a German verb form related to the modal verb müssen. In standard grammar it represents the Konjunktiv II (subjunctive) form for the second person singular, used to express hypothetical obligation, conditional necessity, or a polite suggestion. The form signals that the obligation is not actualized but imagined or contingent.

Morphology and related forms: In Konjunktiv II, muss forms appear across the persons as follows: ich müsste,

Usage and nuance: Müsstest is typically used in conditional clauses or when giving advice in a non-assertive

Etymology and orthography: The form derives from müssen with the subjunctive mood. In modern standard German,

See also: German grammar, Konjunktiv II, müssen, modal verbs.

du
müsstest,
er
müsste,
wir
müssten,
ihr
müsstet,
sie
müssten.
This
set
contrasts
with
the
indicative
present
(ich
muss,
du
musst,
er
muss,
etc.)
and
the
indicative
simple
past
(ich
musste,
du
musstest,
er
musste,
etc.).
The
use
of
Konjunktiv
II
often
corresponds
to
English
“would
have
to”
or
“should”
depending
on
context,
tone,
and
modality.
way.
For
example:
Wenn
du
müsstest,
könntest
du
früher
gehen.
(If
you
had
to,
you
could
leave
earlier.)
Another
example:
Du
müsstest
dich
endlich
entschließen.
(You
should
really
decide.)
the
preferred
spelling
for
the
second-person
singular
is
müsstest;
occurrences
of
müsstest
in
authors’
texts
or
didactic
material
reflect
the
same
Konjunktiv
II
form,
sometimes
presented
without
separate
word
boundaries
in
teaching
examples.
Dialectal
or
historical
texts
may
show
variant
spellings,
but
müsstest
is
the
normative
form
in
contemporary
usage.