Necessarily
11necessarily — adverb 1 not necessarily possibly but not certainly: Expensive restaurants are not necessarily the best. | “We ll need to employ another engineer, then.” “Not necessarily.” | It does not necessarily follow that a larger workforce will be more… …
12necessarily — /nes euh sair euh lee, ser /, adv. 1. by or of necessity; as a matter of compulsion or requirement: You don t necessarily have to attend. 2. as a necessary, logical, or inevitable result: That conclusion doesn t necessarily follow. [1400 50; late …
13necessarily — adv. Necessarily is used with these adjectives: ↑brief, ↑incomplete, ↑limited, ↑partial, ↑selective, ↑subjective, ↑vague Necessarily is used with these verbs: ↑entail, ↑exclude, ↑involve, ↑ …
14necessarily */*/*/ — UK [ˈnesəsərəlɪ] / UK [ˌnesəˈserəlɪ] adverb always, or in every situation Public spending necessarily affects the economy. • not necessarily …
15necessarily */ — [ˌnesəˈserəli] , [ˈnesəsərəli] adv always, or in every situation • not necessarily not always, or not in every situation[/ex] Our customers will not necessarily understand why we are raising our prices.[/ex] …
16necessarily — nec•es•sar•i•ly [[t]ˌnɛs əˈsɛər ə li, ˈsɛr [/t]] adv. 1) by or of necessity: You don t necessarily have to attend[/ex] 2) as a necessary, logical, or inevitable result: That conclusion doesn t necessarily follow[/ex] • Etymology: 1400–50 …
17necessarily — adverb an increase in fees does not necessarily guarantee a balanced budget Syn: as a consequence, as a result, automatically, as a matter of course, certainly, surely, definitely, incontrovertibly, undoubtedly, inevitably, unavoidably,… …
18necessarily — /nɛsəˈsɛrəli/ (say nesuh seruhlee) adverb 1. by or of necessity: you need not necessarily go to the party. 2. as a necessary result …
19necessarily connected — index appurtenant Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 …
20necessarily included offense — For a lesser offense to be necessarily included in offense charged, within lesser included offense rule, it must be such that the greater offense cannot be committed without also committing the lesser. Kelly v. U. S., 125 U.S.App.D.C. 205, 370… …