charge, commitment, committal, compulsion, demand, desideratum, devoir, duty, essential, exigency, extremity, longing, must, obligation, occasion, ought, requisite, right, the urge, urgency, use, weakness, wish
charge, commitment, committal, compulsion, demand, desideratum, devoir, duty, essential, exigency, extremity, longing, must, obligation, occasion, ought, requisite, right, the urge, urgency, use, weakness, wish
Synonyms:
Necessary.
Required.
Essential.
Want is another word for needs. Additional synonyms include requirements and desire.
needy, as in "He is a needy person."
Adjective
Palest is the Superlative Adjective for pale. To get the Superlative Adjective, you need to put the Adjective in the highest degree. EX: Big, Bigger, Biggest Tall, Taller, Tallest
No. It is used most often as a verb, sometimes as a noun, but it is never an adjective.(Adjectives related to need include needy and the past participle needed.)
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"Perfect" can be either a verb or an adjective: "His hair was perfect!" {adjective} "You need to perfect this poem before submitting it for publication. {verb}
The adjective form for the noun need is needy.The adjective form for the verb to need is needed.
We need more information to answer this question.
Adjective
Secondary is the right adjective
Necessary is an adjective (needed, required).There are related nouns: need and necessity.
needful as an adjective for need the suffix is "ful"
The word further can be used as either an adjective or an adverb. As an adjective: the book is about the further adventures of Bill and Ted. As an adverb: you need to travel further.
The noun form of the adjective 'needy' is neediness.The word 'needy' is the adjective form of the noun need.
Palest is the Superlative Adjective for pale. To get the Superlative Adjective, you need to put the Adjective in the highest degree. EX: Big, Bigger, Biggest Tall, Taller, Tallest
The word 'apparently' is the adverb form of the adjective apparent.Example:The apparent cause of the problem is a dead battery. (adjective)You apparently need a new battery. (adverb)
No. It is used most often as a verb, sometimes as a noun, but it is never an adjective.(Adjectives related to need include needy and the past participle needed.)
The adjective form for the noun synthesis is synthetic. Example use: Synthetic flowers don't need to be watered.