The verb form related to "necessary" is "necessitate," which means to make something necessary or required. Another related verb is "necessitate," which implies causing something to be needed or unavoidable. In a more general sense, you might also consider the verb "require" as it conveys a similar meaning.
Necessary is not a verb and does not have participle forms.
The word 'needed' is the past participle, past tense of the verb to need.The word need is also a noun form, a singular, common abstract noun; a word for circumstances in which something is necessary; a necessity.The noun form for the verb to need is needing.
The complete verb is 'are searching'; are is the auxiliary verb and searching is the main verb.
a verb
The verb form is discover.
The verb form is to necessitate.
The verb form is to necessitate.
no it is not...
Necessary is not a verb and does not have participle forms.
The adjective form of necessity is necessary.
Help is a verb - as in to give what is necessary to accomplish a task
Yes, this is necessary.
It's an adjective.
Yes, "is" is a linking verb used to connect the subject of a sentence to a predicate nominative or adjective. It helps to clarify the relationship between the subject and the complement in a sentence.
Overreacted is a verb. It's the past tense of overreact.
Finance is both a noun: The project will only go ahead if they can raise the necessary finance. and a verb: The project was financed by grants.
As a verb e.g. " It was necessary to recalculate the expense budget " .