I found the sentence, ¿por qué habría de asustar un sombrero?— me respondieron. I tried looking it up and apparently haber de can be used conditionally to express confusion of a topic. i think this is important as well as haber que, i saw it in a book although i can't remember the sentence haber que is apparently also another form of obligation like tener que
Haber de
- « Back to Q&A Forum
- « Previous questionNext question »
David O.Kwiziq community member
Haber de
This question relates to:Spanish lesson "Haber de + infinitive to express formal obligation or future action (perífrasis verbal)"
Asked 1 year ago
Hola David
That's also quite a specific use of haber de. It's used as a question ¿Por qué habría de...? when a doubt about something has risen in a conversation and a person asks this question to clarify the doubt.
I've added some example sentences to illustrate this use in the lesson.
The other structure that you mention for obligation: haber que... is more basic and is in this other lesson.
I hope it helps.
Saludos
Don't have an account yet? Join today
Ask a question
Find your Spanish level for FREE
Test your Spanish to the CEFR standard
Find your Spanish level