Advertisement
Advertisement
necessity
[nuh-ses-i-tee]
noun
plural
necessitiessomething necessary or indispensable.
food, shelter, and other necessities of life.
the fact of being necessary or indispensable; indispensability.
the necessity of adequate housing.
an imperative requirement or need for something.
the necessity for a quick decision.
Synonyms: demandthe state or fact of being necessary or inevitable.
to face the necessity of testifying in court.
an unavoidable need or compulsion to do something.
not by choice but by necessity.
a state of being in financial need; poverty.
a family in dire necessity.
Philosophy., the quality of following inevitably from logical, physical, or moral laws.
necessity
/ nɪˈsɛsɪtɪ /
noun
(sometimes plural) something needed for a desired result; prerequisite
necessities of life
a condition or set of circumstances, such as physical laws or social rules, that inevitably requires a certain result
it is a matter of necessity to wear formal clothes when meeting the Queen
the state or quality of being obligatory or unavoidable
urgent requirement, as in an emergency or misfortune
in time of necessity we must all work together
poverty or want
rare, compulsion through laws of nature; fate
philosophy
a condition, principle, or conclusion that cannot be otherwise
the constraining force of physical determinants on all aspects of life Compare freedom
logic
the property of being necessary
a statement asserting that some property is essential or statement is necessarily true
the operator that indicates that the expression it modifies is true in all possible worlds
inevitably; necessarily
Other Word Forms
- nonnecessity noun
- supernecessity noun
Word History and Origins
Origin of necessity1
Idioms and Phrases
of necessity, as an inevitable result; unavoidably; necessarily.
Our trip to China must of necessity be postponed for a while.
More idioms and phrases containing necessity
Synonym Study
Example Sentences
For many evangelical leaders, having an expensive home, clothes, a car and other accouterments are a necessity — even if their own members are struggling financially.
A necessity to turn around their white-ball fortunes means England cannot afford to do the same with their key men.
Lutnick defended the move as an economic necessity, arguing that U.S. higher education would “empty from the top” without foreign students.
Boy Kavalier thinks he owns him, negating all necessity for his subject’s approval.
However, police have advised Tianjin's more than 13 million residents to avoid moving around the city if possible and to stick to shops nearby them to purchase any immediate necessities.
Advertisement
Related Words
Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Browse