The noun form of the verb 'necessitate' is necessitation.
The adjective form of necessity is necessary.
The verb form for the noun necessity is necessitate(necessitates, necessitating, necessitated).
necessitate
add a dThe past tense of necessitate is necessitated.
Expanding our educational programming will necessitate the hiring of additional teachers. A shortage of available fresh produce will necessitate a price increase at the grocery store.
Necessity as a noun means anything indispensable or essential; necessarily is the adverbial form, while the verb form, necessitate, means to make necessary (noun or adjective), to cause to be needed, as in:My working shorter hours will necessitate some cuts to the household budget, but this isn't necessarily a bad thing if we just don't buy what wasn't a necessity in the first place: if it wasn't a necessary item, we didn't need it.
To make necessary or indispensable; to render unaviolable., To reduce to the necessity of; to force; to compel.
To bake the perfect cake would necessitate using a good, well tried recipe.
The verb form is to necessitate.
No, the noun 'many' is a word for a majority of people; as a noun, the noun 'many' is preceded by the word 'the'.Example: It is the few miscreants that necessitate laws affecting the many.A collective noun is a noun used to group people or things in a descriptive way.Examples: a crowd of people, a staff of people, a mob of people, etc.The word 'many' is also an adjective (when placed before a noun), and an indefinite pronoun (when standing alone).Examples:We're expecting many people for the opening. (adjective)We sent out dozens of invitations and many have already responded. (indefinite pronoun)
The verb form is to necessitate.
One.