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.
The adjective form of necessity is necessary.
No, the word 'should' is a modal verb, an auxiliary verb that expresses the necessity or the possibility of a main verb.A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence.Example: Max should finish mowing the lawn before he goes to the mall.The modal verb 'should' indicates the necessity of the verb 'finish'.The pronoun 'he' takes the place of the noun 'Max' in the second part of the sentence.
The word required is the past participle, past tense of the verb to require; the past participle of the verb is also an adjective.Examples:You are required to pay at the time of service. (verb)I have the required credits to take this course. (adjective)
No, "can" is not an adjective; it is a modal verb. Modal verbs are used to express ability, possibility, permission, or necessity. For example, in the sentence "She can swim," "can" indicates the ability to swim. Adjectives, on the other hand, describe nouns, such as "happy" or "blue."
There is no adjective form of the noun 'necessity'.A related adjective is necessary.
The verb form for the noun necessity is necessitate(necessitates, necessitating, necessitated).
The adjective form of necessity is necessary.
No, "should" is a modal verb used to indicate obligation, necessity, or recommendation. It is not a liking verb.
No, "should" is not a verb. It is a modal auxiliary verb used to indicate obligation, necessity, or advisability.
A auxiliary verb that expresses necessity or possibility.
The verb in the sentence is "to be," specifically the phrasal verb "have to be." This indicates a necessity or obligation to maintain quietness in a library.
No, it is not a preposition. The word need is a verb, or noun.
No, "needn't" is not a verb; it is a contraction of "need not." It functions as a modal verb phrase, indicating the absence of necessity. In this context, it modifies the meaning of the base verb that follows it, expressing that something is not required.
There are a number of possibilities, one most likely:mead - (drink) a beer or alemeet - (verb) to encounter or rendezvousmete - (verb) give, act uponneed - (noun, verb) necessity, to require
The verb in the sentence is "need." It is the action word that expresses the subject's requirement or necessity to learn.
No, the word 'should' is a modal verb, an auxiliary verb that expresses the necessity or the possibility of a main verb.A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence.Example: Max should finish mowing the lawn before he goes to the mall.The modal verb 'should' indicates the necessity of the verb 'finish'.The pronoun 'he' takes the place of the noun 'Max' in the second part of the sentence.
"Can" and "could" are modal verbs, which express ability, possibility, permission, or necessity in a sentence. They are used to modify the meaning of another verb.