Define the word needs

Synonyms

Example Sentences



the dangers of global warming must needs be recognized—and recognized soon—by the industrialized nations of the world

Word History

Etymology

Middle English nedes, from Old English nēdes, from genitive of nēd need

First Known Use

before the 12th century, in the meaning defined above

Time Traveler

The first known use of needs was
before the 12th century

Dictionary Entries Near needs

Cite this Entry

“Needs.” Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/needs. Accessed 13 Apr. 2023.

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Merriam-Webster unabridged

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

[1]A need is dissatisfaction at a point of time and in a given context. Needs are distinguished from wants. In the case of a need, a deficiency causes a clear adverse outcome: a dysfunction or death. In other words, a need is something required for a safe, stable and healthy life (e.g. air, water, food, land, shelter) while a want is a desire, wish or aspiration. When needs or wants are backed by purchasing power, they have the potential to become economic demands.

Basic needs such as air, water, food and protection from environmental dangers are necessary for an organism to live. In addition to basic needs, humans also have needs of a social or societal nature such as the human need to socialise or belong to a family unit or group. Needs can be objective and physical, such as the need for food, or psychical and subjective, such as the need for self-esteem. The concept of «unmet need» arises in relation to needs in a social context which are not being fulfilled.[2]

Needs and wants are a matter of interest in, and form a common substrate for, the fields of philosophy, biology, psychology, social science, economics, marketing and politics.

Psychological definition[edit]

To most psychologists, need is a psychological feature that arouses an organism to action toward a goal, giving purpose and direction to behavior.

Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs

The most widely known academic model of needs was proposed by psychologist Abraham Maslow in 1943. His theory proposed that people have a hierarchy of psychological needs, which range from basic physiological or lower order needs such as food, water and safety (e.g. shelter) through to the higher order needs such as self-actualization. People tend to spend most of their resources (time, energy and finances) attempting to satisfy these basic before the higher order needs of belonging, esteem and self-actualization become meaningful.[3] Maslow’s approach is a generalised model for understanding human motivations in a wide variety of contexts, but must be adapted for specific contexts. While intuitively appealing, Maslow’s model has been difficult to operationalize experimentally. It was developed further by Clayton Alderfer.

The academic study of needs, which was at its zenith in the 1950s, receives less attention among psychologists today. One exception involves Richard Sennett’s work on the importance of respect.

One difficulty with a psychological theory of needs is that conceptions of «need» may vary radically among different cultures or among different parts of the same society. For a psychological theory of human need, one found compatible with the Doyal/Gough Theory, see self-determination theory.

Doyal and Gough’s definition[edit]

A second view of need is presented in the work of political economy professor Ian Gough, who has published on the subject of human needs in the context of social assistance provided by the welfare state.[1] Together with medical ethics professor Len Doyal,[4] he published A Theory of Human Need in 1991.[5]

Their view goes beyond the emphasis on psychology: it might be said that an individual’s needs represent «the costs of being human» within society. A person who does not have their needs fulfilled—i.e., a «needy» person—will function poorly in society.

In the view of Gough and Doyal, every person has an objective interest in avoiding serious harm that prevents that person from endeavoring to attain their vision of what is good, regardless of what exactly that may be. That endeavour requires a capacity to participate in the societal setting in which the individual lives. More specifically, every person needs to possess both physical health and personal autonomy. The latter involves the capacity to make informed choices about what should be done and how to implement it. This requires mental health, cognitive skills, and opportunities to participate in society’s activities and collective decision-making.

How are such needs satisfied? Doyal and Gough point to twelve broad categories of «intermediate needs» that define how the needs for physical health and personal autonomy are fulfilled:[5]

  1. Adequate nutritious food and water
  2. Adequate protective housing
  3. A safe work environment
  4. A supply of clothing
  5. A safe physical environment
  6. Appropriate health care
  7. Security in childhood
  8. Meaningful primary relations with others
  9. Physical security
  10. Economic security
  11. Safe birth control and child-bearing
  12. Appropriate basic and cross-cultural education

How are the details of needs satisfaction determined? The authors point to rational identification of needs, using up-to-date scientific knowledge; consideration of the actual experiences of individuals in their everyday lives; and democratic decision-making. The satisfaction of human needs cannot be imposed «from above».

This theory may be compared to the capability approach developed by Amartya Sen and Martha Nussbaum. Individuals with more internal «assets» or «capacities» (e.g., education, mental health, physical strength, etc.) have more capabilities (i.e., more available choices, more positive freedom). They are thus more able to escape or avoid poverty. Those individuals who possess more capabilities fulfill more of their needs.

Pending publication in 2015 in the Cambridge Journal of Economics of the final version of this work, Gough discussed the Doyal/Gough theory in a working paper available online.[6]

Other views[edit]

The concept of intellectual need has been studied in education, as well as in social work, where an Oxford Bibliographies Online: Social Work entry on Human Need reviewed the literature as of 2008 on human need from a variety of disciplines. Also see the 2008[7] and pending 2015 entries on Human Needs: Overview in the Encyclopedia of Social Work.[8]

In his 1844 Paris Manuscripts, Karl Marx famously defined humans as «creatures of need» or «needy creatures» who experienced suffering in the process of learning and working to meet their needs.[9] These needs were both physical needs as well as moral, emotional and intellectual needs. According to Marx, human development is characterized by the fact that in the process of meeting their needs, humans develop new needs, implying that at least to some extent they make and remake their own nature. This idea is discussed in more detail by the Hungarian philosopher Ágnes Heller in A Theory of Need in Marx (London: Allison and Busby, 1976). Political economy professor Michael Lebowitz[10] has developed the Marxian interpretation of needs further in two editions of his book Beyond Capital.[11]

Professor György Márkus systematised Marx’s ideas about needs as follows: humans are different from other animals because their vital activity, work, is mediated to the satisfaction of needs (an animal who manufactures tools to produce other tools or his/her satisfactory), which makes a human being a universal natural being capable to turn the whole nature into the subject of his/her needs and his/her activity, and develops his/her needs and abilities (essential human forces) and develops himself/herself, a historical-universal being. Work generates the breach of the animal subject-object fusion, thus generating the possibility of human conscience and self-conscience, which tend to universality (the universal conscious being). A human being’s conditions as a social being are given by work, but not only by work as it is not possible to live like a human being without a relationship with others: work is social because human beings work for each other with means and abilities produced by prior generations. Human beings are also free entities able to accomplish, during their lifetime, the objective possibilities generated by social evolution, on the basis of their conscious decisions. Freedom should be understood both in a negative (freedom to decide and to establish relationships) and a positive sense (dominion over natural forces and development of human creativity) of the essential human forces. To sum up, the essential interrelated traits of human beings are: a) work is their vital activity; b) human beings are conscious beings; c) human beings are social beings; d) human beings tend to universality, which manifests in the three previous traits and make human beings natural-historical-universal, social-universal and universal conscious entities, and e) human beings are free.[12]

In his texts about what he calls «moral economics», professor Julio Boltvinik Kalinka asserts that the ideas exposed by David Wiggins about needs are correct but insufficient: needs are of a normative nature but they are also factual. These «gross ethical concepts» (as stated by Hilary Putnam) should also include an evaluation: Ross Fitzgerald’s criticism of Maslow’s ideas rejects the concept of objective human needs and uses instead the concept of preferences.

Marshall Rosenberg’s model of Compassionate Communication, also known as Nonviolent Communication (NVC)[13] makes the distinction between universal human needs (what sustains and motivates human life) and specific strategies used to meet these needs. Feelings are seen as neither good nor bad, right nor wrong, but as indicators of when human needs are met or unmet. In contrast to Maslow, Rosenberg’s model does not place needs in a hierarchy.[14]

Rosenberg’s model supports people developing awareness of feelings as indicators, of what needs are alive within them and others, moment by moment; to forefront needs, to make it more likely and possible for two or more people, to arrive at mutually agreed upon strategies to meet the needs of all parties. Rosenberg diagrams this sequence in part like this: Observations > Feelings > Needs > Requests where identifying needs is most significant to the process.

People also talk about the needs of a community or organisation. Such needs might include demand for a particular type of business, for a certain government program or entity, or for individuals with particular skills. This is an example of metonymy in language and presents with the logical problem of reification.

Medical needs.
In clinical medical practice, it may be difficult to distinguish between treatment a patient needs; treatment that may be desirable;and treatment that could be deemed frivolous. At one end of this spectrum for example, any practising clinician would accept that a child with fulminating meningococcal meningitis needs rapid access to medical care. At the other end, rarely could a young healthy woman be deemed to need breast augmentation. Numerous surgical procedures fall into this spectrum: particularly, this is so in our ageing Western population, where there is an ever-increasing prevalence of painful, but not life-threatening disorders: typified by the ageing spine.

See also[edit]

  • Consumer behaviour
  • Human rights
  • Homeostasis
  • Information needs
  • Maslow’s hierarchy of needs
  • Mental health
  • Murray’s system of needs
  • Needs assessment
  • Need theory (McClelland)
  • Nonviolent Communication
  • Poverty
  • Simple living
  • Want
  • Well-being

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ a b «Department of Social and Policy Sciences at the University of Bath». Archived from the original on 2007-02-14. Retrieved 2007-06-03.
  2. ^ British Association of Social Workers, Unmet need for care, Final report July 2017, accessed 23 July 2022
  3. ^ Neal, C. M., Quester, P. G., Hawkins, D. I., Pettigrew, Grimmer & Davis, Consumer Behaviour: Implications for Marketing Strategy, Sydney, McGraw-Hill Irwin. 2008
  4. ^ «Archived copy». Archived from the original on 2006-10-14. Retrieved 2007-07-26.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  5. ^ a b «Doyal and Gough’s Intermediate Needs». changingminds.org.
  6. ^ Gough, Ian (June 2014). «Climate Change and Sustainable Welfare: An Argument for the Centrality of Human Needs». Paper was presented at the GRI discussion group on June 19, 2014, Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change and the Environment, London School of Economics.
  7. ^ Dover, M. A., & Joseph, B. H. R. (2008). Human needs: Overview. In T. Mizrahi & L. Davis (Eds.), The encyclopedia of social work (20th ed., pp. 398-406). New York: Oxford University Press and National Association of Social Workers.
  8. ^ Dover, M. A. (2015a, in press). Human needs: Overview. In C. Franklin (Ed.), The encyclopedia of social work (Electronic ed.). New York: Oxford University Press and National Association of Social Workers.
  9. ^ Marx, Karl. «Marx’s Economic and Philosophic Manuscripts of 1844». www.marxists.org.
  10. ^ «Michael Lebowitz, Professor, SFU Dept. Of Economics». Archived from the original on 2007-04-26. Retrieved 2017-09-06.
  11. ^ «Macmillan — Distinguished & Award Winning Global Publisher in 41 countries». US Macmillan.
  12. ^ «Necesidades humanas» — Julio Boltvinik (in Spanish)
  13. ^ «Center for Nonviolent Communication: A Global Organisation». www.cnvc.org.
  14. ^ «cnvc:: Needs List». cnvc.org.

References[edit]

  • Gough, Ian (1994). «Economic Institutions and the Satisfaction of Human Needs» (PDF). Journal of Economic Issues. 28: 25–66. doi:10.1080/00213624.1994.11505519.

External links[edit]

  • Media related to Needs at Wikimedia Commons

Wikiquote has quotations related to Need.

  • The dictionary definition of need at Wiktionary

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What I have said to my team is that at a point such as this, with 40% adjustment in our currency, it means that Malawians are paying the price. While that is going on, they need to see, us, the commitment on our part, particularly right at the top. The political will needs to go through this with the people, side by side.

Joyce Banda

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PRONUNCIATION OF NEEDS

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GRAMMATICAL CATEGORY OF NEEDS

Needs can act as a noun and an adverb.

A noun is a type of word the meaning of which determines reality. Nouns provide the names for all things: people, objects, sensations, feelings, etc.

The adverb is an invariable part of the sentence that can change, explain or simplify a verb or another adverb.

WHAT DOES NEEDS MEAN IN ENGLISH?

Need

A need is something that is necessary for organisms to live a healthy life. Needs are distinguished from wants because a deficiency would cause a clear negative outcome, such as dysfunction or death. Needs can be objective and physical, such as food, or they can be subjective and psychological, such as the need for self-esteem. On a social level, needs are sometimes controversial. Understanding needs and wants is an issue in the fields of politics, social science, and philosophy.


Definition of needs in the English dictionary

The definition of needs in the dictionary is of necessity. Other definition of needs is what is required; necessities.

WORDS THAT RHYME WITH NEEDS

Synonyms and antonyms of needs in the English dictionary of synonyms

SYNONYMS OF «NEEDS»

The following words have a similar or identical meaning as «needs» and belong to the same grammatical category.

Translation of «needs» into 25 languages

online translator

TRANSLATION OF NEEDS

Find out the translation of needs to 25 languages with our English multilingual translator.

The translations of needs from English to other languages presented in this section have been obtained through automatic statistical translation; where the essential translation unit is the word «needs» in English.

Translator English — Chinese


需求

1,325 millions of speakers

Translator English — Spanish


necesidades

570 millions of speakers

English


needs

510 millions of speakers

Translator English — Hindi


आवश्यकताओं

380 millions of speakers

Translator English — Arabic


الاحتياجات

280 millions of speakers

Translator English — Russian


потребности

278 millions of speakers

Translator English — Portuguese


necessidades

270 millions of speakers

Translator English — Bengali


চাহিদা

260 millions of speakers

Translator English — French


besoins

220 millions of speakers

Translator English — Malay


Keperluan

190 millions of speakers

Translator English — German


Bedürfnisse

180 millions of speakers

Translator English — Japanese


ニーズ

130 millions of speakers

Translator English — Korean


요구

85 millions of speakers

Translator English — Javanese


Kabutuhan

85 millions of speakers

Translator English — Vietnamese


nhu cầu

80 millions of speakers

Translator English — Tamil


தேவைகளை

75 millions of speakers

Translator English — Marathi


गरजा

75 millions of speakers

Translator English — Turkish


ihtiyaçlar

70 millions of speakers

Translator English — Italian


esigenze

65 millions of speakers

Translator English — Polish


potrzeby

50 millions of speakers

Translator English — Ukrainian


потреби

40 millions of speakers

Translator English — Romanian


nevoile

30 millions of speakers

Translator English — Greek


ανάγκες

15 millions of speakers

Translator English — Afrikaans


behoeftes

14 millions of speakers

Translator English — Swedish


behov

10 millions of speakers

Translator English — Norwegian


behov

5 millions of speakers

Trends of use of needs

TENDENCIES OF USE OF THE TERM «NEEDS»

The term «needs» is very widely used and occupies the 1.434 position in our list of most widely used terms in the English dictionary.

Trends

FREQUENCY

Very widely used

The map shown above gives the frequency of use of the term «needs» in the different countries.

Principal search tendencies and common uses of needs

List of principal searches undertaken by users to access our English online dictionary and most widely used expressions with the word «needs».

FREQUENCY OF USE OF THE TERM «NEEDS» OVER TIME

The graph expresses the annual evolution of the frequency of use of the word «needs» during the past 500 years. Its implementation is based on analysing how often the term «needs» appears in digitalised printed sources in English between the year 1500 and the present day.

Examples of use in the English literature, quotes and news about needs

10 QUOTES WITH «NEEDS»

Famous quotes and sentences with the word needs.

By the general process of epic poetry, I mean the way this form of art has constantly responded to the profound needs of the society in which it was made.

Dad needs to show an incredible amount of respect and humor and friendship toward his mate so the kids understand their parents are sexy, they’re fun, they do things together, they’re best friends. Kids learn by example. If I respect Mom, they’re going to respect Mom.

Instapaper is much bigger today than I could have predicted in 2008, and it has simply grown far beyond what one person can do. To really shine, it needs a full-time staff of at least a few people.

Blowing up buses will not induce the Israelis to move forward, and neither will the killing of Palestinians or the demolition of their homes and their future. All this needs to stop. And we pledge that Jordan will do its utmost to help achieve it.

What I have said to my team is that at a point such as this, with 40% adjustment in our currency, it means that Malawians are paying the price. While that is going on, they need to see, us, the commitment on our part, particularly right at the top. The political will needs to go through this with the people, side by side.

Well, any good comeback needs some true believers.

The NBA needs more of that ‘it’s-about-us-against-them’ mentality.

Approaching life through ’40 Chances’ gives reasons to hope and actions to take, and it offers fresh approaches that our world desperately needs.

Events that get covered in the U.S. one way are not very important elsewhere or are given a completely different slant ,and one needs to have a kind of comparative way of thinking in order to arrive at a judgment that is not completely provincial, that doesn’t end up ratifying one’s own national perspective and hence, one’s own national agendas.

One needs to know what the hierarchy of values are from which one takes inspiration, and in a democratic society this is the subject of continuous democratic debate.

10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «NEEDS»

Discover the use of needs in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to needs and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.

1

His Needs, Her Needs: Building an Affair-Proof Marriage

I read the book and immediately things began to improve.» «It is the best book on marriage I have ever read.» «I have recommended this book to every one of my friends. It should become a staple in every house.

Willard F. Jr. Harley, 2011

2

Marijuana Legalization: What Everyone Needs to Know

This book will provide readers with a non-partisan primer about the topic, covering everything from the medical definition and benefits and negative consequences of using marijuana, to current laws around the drug, the likely consequences …

3

Training Needs Assessment: Methods, Tools, and Techniques

Training Needs Assessment is the second volume in Pfeiffer’s The Skilled Trainer Series. «In this volume, Jean Barbazette—a true training pro—shares her tips and tricks for conducting a training needs assessment.

4

Not for Profit: Why Democracy Needs the Humanities

Drawing on the stories of troubling—and hopeful—educational developments from around the world, Nussbaum offers a manifesto that should be a rallying cry for anyone who cares about the deepest purposes of education.

5

A Practical Guide to Needs Assessment

This thoroughly revised edition of the best-selling resource A Practical Guide to Needs Assessment offers a practical and comprehensive guide for practitioners who are responsible for Introducing a training program Creating adult education …

6

Kosovo: What Everyone Needs to KnowRG

The most important of these is the question of the right to self-determination, invoked by the Kosovo Albanians, as opposed to right of territorial integrity invoked by the Serbs.

Social work graduate students, as well as social workers in the field who need to brush up on their skills, will find this book an invaluable aid.

David Royse, Michele Staton-Tindall, Karen Badger, 2009

8

Second Language Needs Analysis

The studies in this volume explore Needs Analysis in the public, vocational and academic sectors, in contexts ranging from service encounters in coffee shops to foreign language needs assessment in the U.S. military.

9

Supporting Special Needs: Understanding Inclusion in the …

This text covers the underpinning knowledge required for special needs modules on Early Years courses. It guides students and practitioners through this subject area, and provides information on the issues and legislation.

«Describes the concept of needs and wants and making choices between the two»—Unedited summary from book.

10 NEWS ITEMS WHICH INCLUDE THE TERM «NEEDS»

Find out what the national and international press are talking about and how the term needs is used in the context of the following news items.

Apple desperately needs to split official apps from iOS updates

To get that fixed, Apple needs to roll out an OTA update for your entire phone, which requires a restart and a lot of waiting. It’s ridiculous and … «The Next Web, Jul 15»

Ruth Porat May Be Just What Investors Think Google Needs

“I am not in the camp that believes Google needs adult supervision. What they need is an endless stream of new ideas and the discipline to … «New York Times, Jul 15»

Official Watchdog Says He Needs Access to Sensitive Documents

Inspector General Michael E. Horowitz said the memo will delay access to grand jury, wiretap and other documents he needs to investigate … «NPR, Jul 15»

Why Labour lost the election – and what it needs to do next

In the report, Red Alert: Why Labour Lost and What Needs to Change?, Paul Hunter, the institute’s head of research, said this argument was a … «The Guardian, Jul 15»

The survival of public education is at risk. Here’s what LAUSD needs

The Los Angeles Unified School District has at most a year to replace Ramon C. Cortines as superintendent. This is a crucial time for the district … «Los Angeles Times, Jul 15»

Why Cuba Needs to Follow the Singapore Model

Fifty years ago Lee Kuan Yew turned a tiny rock in the sea into one of Asia’s strongest economies. Castro could do the same in the Caribbean. «Foreign Policy, Jul 15»

Hillary Clinton needs to address the racist undertones of her 2008 …

Black Lives Matter, the advocacy group for black interests, has gotten the attention of the Democratic presidential candidates, who are … «The Week Magazine, Jul 15»

The Emotional Moment a Special Needs Orphan Meets Her New …

The Shooks, who had always hoped to adopt a special needs child, fell in love with Lucy after viewing a video of her singing a Chinese … «Yahoo Parenting, Jul 15»

10 Reasons Your Brand Needs To Be On YouTube

This article will cover 10 reasons why your brand needs to be on YouTube. Please let me know your thoughts in the comments below! 1. «Forbes, Jul 15»

Jeff Gordon ‘set the template for what a driver needs to be’

Try summing up Jeff Gordon’s career in a thousand words. Put a headline on it. What does it say? Ninety-two NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race … «Indianapolis Star, Jul 15»

REFERENCE

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Crossword clues for needs

needs
  • Necessary things
  • More than wants
  • Doesn’t just want
  • Topic for the marriage counselor
  • Pines for
  • Is short of
  • Food, shelter, etc
  • Essential things
  • Things to fill
  • They must be met
  • Sleep, food, etc
  • Food, shelter and clothing
  • Food and water, e.g
  • Life’s essentials
  • Is desperate for
  • Indispensable items
  • Food, clothing and shelter
  • Food and shelter, among others
  • You’ll want to meet them
  • Water and air, e.g
  • They’re nonnegotiable
  • They can’t be ignored
  • Some are pressing
  • Shelter, food, etc
  • Pressing matters
  • Of necessity
  • Non-negotiable things
  • Is wanting
  • Hasn’t, but should have
  • Hasn’t got
  • Has got to have
  • Food and water, for humans
  • Air and water, e.g
  • Absolute requirements
  • «. . . according to his ___»
  • You can’t live without them
  • Who ____ it?
  • Urgent wants
  • U.K. rockers This Town ___ Guns
  • Topic for a marriage counselor
  • Things to fulfill
  • Things often confused with wants
  • They’re met by marketeers
  • They may be met
  • They may be crying
  • Subject of Maslow’s hierarchy
  • Sleep and a stiff drink, among others, for new parents
  • Shelter, food, air, etc
  • Sex and money, for most people
  • Placebo: «Special ___»
  • Placebo «A friend in ___ a friend indeed»
  • Not just wants
  • Motivators, in psychology
  • Model girlfriend & house in the hills, for a rocker?
  • Meeting them is a good thing
  • Masks and scuba tanks, to scuba divers
  • Light and water, e.g., for plants
  • Kendrick Lamar «She ___ Me»
  • It’s important to meet them
  • Is obliged (with an infinitive)
  • Huge mansion and fast cars are some, for rich stars
  • Hard-up Collective Soul song off «Dosage»?
  • Hard up Collective Soul song off «Dosage»?
  • Food, water, shelter, et al
  • Food, water, friends, etc
  • Food, water, etc
  • Food, water, and shelter
  • Food, sleep, etc
  • Food, clothing, and shelter, e.g
  • Food and clothing, i.e
  • Desires strongly
  • Crying things
  • Collective Soul song about must-haves?
  • Can’t exist without
  • Basic ones should be met
  • Absolutely requires
  • A sword and a net, for a gladiator who has any chance of surviving
  • “Pressing” things
  • «Mars ___ Moms» (2011 animated movie)
  • Lacks
  • Privations
  • Essentials
  • Sine qua nons
  • Desiderata
  • Exigencies
  • Basic ___
  • Base negotiating amounts
  • More than desires
  • Food and shelter, e.g.
  • Has got to have it
  • Has to have
  • Required things
  • Cries out for
  • Calls for
  • It’s good to meet them
  • Lists of basics
  • Philanthropists’ concerns
  • What alimony covers, minimally
  • Requirements
  • Necessities
  • Requires
  • Paint and brush, for a painter
  • Must have
  • Must-haves
  • Can’t do without
  • Humanitarian concerns
  • Food and shelter, for two
  • Isn’t complete without
  • Topic in couples therapy
  • Food and water, for two
  • Musts
  • Philanthropic focus
  • They’re indispensable
  • Budget priorities
  • Air and water, e.g.
  • Imperatives
  • Cravings
  • Water and sunlight, for plants
  • Cell towers for cellphones, for example
  • Necessarily
  • Things lacking
  • The basics
  • Food, shelter, etc.
  • Wants
  • Demands
  • Misses
  • Food, sleep, etc.
  • Requisites
  • Prerequisites (5)
  • Shelter, food, etc.
  • Bare essentials
  • Obligations
  • Food, clothing, etc.
  • «Pressing» things
  • » . . . to each according to his ___»: Marx
  • Sleep, food, etc.
  • Shelter, clothing, etc.
  • Is obligated
  • Deficiencies
  • Great soul in Derby perhaps absorbed by mother
  • Can’t do without Geordie news bosses?
  • Calls for works to be heard
  • Wants, requires
  • Wants to be observed taking daughter back
  • Requires, wants
  • Requirements met, though rising, after intervention of daughter
  • Requires massages, we hear
  • Requirements ascertained after intervention by Democrat recalled
  • Demands pounds in speech
  • Can’t live without
  • Longs for
  • They may be pressing
  • Gotta have
  • Can’t forgo
  • They’re not optional
  • Is lacking
  • Can’t survive without

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
The Collaborative International Dictionary

Needs

Needs Needs, adv. [Orig. gen. of need, used as an adverb. Cf.
-wards.]
Of necessity; necessarily; indispensably; — often with must,
and equivalent to of need.

A man must needs love mauger his head.
—Chaucer.

And he must needs go through Samari

  1. —John iv. 4.

    He would needs know the cause of his repulse.
    —Sir J.
    Davies.

Douglas Harper’s Etymology Dictionary

needs

«of necessity, necessarily,» in archaic constructions involving must (late 14c.) is from Old English nede, instrumental and genitive singular of nied (see need), used as an adverb reinforcing must, hence the genitive ending.

Wiktionary

needs

adv. Of necessity; necessarily; indispensably; often with »’must»’, and equivalent to «of need». n. (plural of need English) vb. (en-third-person singular of: need)

WordNet
Wikipedia

Usage examples of «needs».

I have not found the damsel ere ye turn back, I must needs abide in this land searching for her.

But since we must needs part hastily, this at least I bid you, that ye abide with me for to-night, and the banquet in the great pavilion.

Untouched by multiplicity, it will be wholly self-sufficing, an absolute First, whereas any not-first demands its earlier, and any non-simplex needs the simplicities within itself as the very foundations of its composite existence.

When an authorized person needs to access the network from offsite, she must first identify herself as an authorized user by typing in her secret PIN and the digits displayed on her token device.

Congress States were entitled to enact legislation adapted to the local needs of interstate and foreign commerce, that a pilotage law was of this description, and was, accordingly, constitutionally applicable until Congress acted to the contrary to vessels engaged in the coasting trade.

Hence the praemotio physica of the Thomists, and the praevenient and adjuvant grace of the theologians, without which no one can begin the Christian life, and which must needs be supernatural when the end is supernatural.

This material was another strictly non-Mesklinite product, a piece of molecular architecture vaguely analogous to zeolite in structure, which adsorbed hydrogen on the inner walls of its structural channels and, within a wide temperature range, maintained an equilibrium partial pressure with the gas which was compatible with Mesklinite metabolic needs.

I shall tell thee the boon that I would ask of thee and thy generosity has granted me, and it is that on the morrow thou wilt dub me a knight, and that this night in the chapel of thy castle I shall keep vigil over my armor, and on the morrow, as I have said, what I fervently desire will be accomplished so that I can, as I needs must do, travel the four corners of the earth in search of adventures on behalf of those in need, this being the office of chivalry and of knights errant, for I am one of them and my desire is disposed to such deeds.

Your advertising needs to address the following issues in order to be successful: 1.

Although a successor Sunni general almost certainly would not be as willing as Saddam to take risks, interpret reality to suit his needs, and pursue an expansive foreign policy based on aggression, it would still be tough to accept what would look like a Saddam clone.

They will be ever eager to, ahem, serve your needs as well as those of the princess.

The airplane gets more lift from the air traveling faster over the wing, so the pilot needs to slow the plane down and bring it to a lower altitude to maintain its path.

There were objections aplenty, I can tell you, and the debate raged on for quite a while, but in the end the needs of everyone in the Amalgamation had to come first.

Kind Heart wishes to consult with King Cyranius, or if he needs assistance, the king and his army shall be amassing outside the palace as soon as the steeds can carry us there.

They were indeed the same dark folk who had shanghaied Carter on their noisome galley so long ago, and whose kith he had seen driven in herds about the unclean wharves of that accursed lunar city, with the leaner ones toiling and the fatter ones taken away in crates for other needs of their polypous and amorphous masters.

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noun

a requirement, necessary duty, or obligation: There is no need for you to go there.

a lack of something wanted or deemed necessary: to fulfill the needs of the assignment.

urgent want, as of something requisite: He has no need of your charity.

necessity arising from the circumstances of a situation or case: There is no need to worry.

a situation or time of difficulty; exigency: to help a friend in need;to be a friend in need.

a condition marked by the lack of something requisite: the need for leadership.

destitution; extreme poverty: The family’s need is acute.

verb (used with object)

to have need of; require: to need money.

verb (used without object)

to be under an obligation (used as an auxiliary, typically in an interrogative or in a negative statement, and followed by infinitive, in certain cases without to; in the 3d person singular the form is need, not needs): He need not go.

to be in need or want.

to be necessary: There needs no apology.

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Idioms about need

    if need be, should the necessity arise: If need be, I can type the letters myself.

Origin of need

before 900; (noun) Middle English nede,Old English nēd (WSaxon nīed), cognate with German Not,Old Norse nauth,Gothic nauths; (v.) Middle English neden,Old English nēodian, derivative of the noun

synonym study for need

4. Need, necessity imply a want, a lack, or a demand, which must be filled. Need, a word of Old English origin, has connotations that make it strong in emotional appeal: the need to be appreciated. Necessity, a word of Latin origin, is more formal and impersonal or objective; though much stronger than need in expressing urgency or imperative demand, it is less effective in appealing to the emotions: Water is a necessity for living things.

OTHER WORDS FROM need

needer, nounun·need·ed, adjectivewell-needed, adjective

Words nearby need

neddy, Nederland, Neder Rijn, nedette, née, need, needed, needfire, needful, Needham, neediness

Dictionary.com Unabridged
Based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023

WHEN TO USE

What are other ways to say need?

To need something is to have need of it. How does need compare to synonyms want, lack, and require? Find out on Thesaurus.com.

Words related to need

commitment, demand, obligation, right, urgency, use, wish, lack, shortage, want, necessity, call for, desire, require, charge, committal, compulsion, desideratum, devoir, duty

How to use need in a sentence

  • Vosloo led the drafting of a new set of guidelines from Unicef designed to help governments and companies develop AI policies that consider children’s needs.

  • That raises the question of a marketer’s need for NBCU’s measurement program if it already has one in place.

  • The project will be the first in the county to recycle wastewater, providing more than 32 percent of the city’s needs, according to a Wednesday press release.

  • It seemed like there was no need for the justification because of the decree.

  • The ability to develop digital capabilities quickly will continue to be critical for meeting customer needs and ensuring survival for your organization.

  • Citizens, perhaps, need to feel like they can communicate something to science.

  • We need to recover and grow the idea that the proper answer to bad speech is more and better speech.

  • To do so is to deify a celebrity for being what we need them to be, while willfully ignoring who they really are.

  • Sadly, it appears the American press often doesn’t need any outside help when it comes to censoring themselves.

  • The need for an Ebola vaccine in West Africa has never been greater.

  • What need to look to right or left when you are swallowing up free mile after mile of dizzying road?

  • You need but will, and it is done; but if you relax your efforts, you will be ruined; for ruin and recovery are both from within.

  • Honour the physician for the need thou hast of him: for the most High hath created him.

  • I presume the twenty-five or thirty miles at this end is unhealthy, even for natives, but it surely need not be so.

  • She did not need a great cook-book; She knew how much and what it took To make things good and sweet and light.

British Dictionary definitions for need


verb

(tr) to be in want ofto need money

(tr) to require or be required of necessity (to be or do something); be obligedto need to do more work

(takes an infinitive without to) used as an auxiliary in negative and interrogative sentences to express necessity or obligation, and does not add -s when used with he, she, it, and singular nounsneed he go?

(intr) archaic to be essential or necessary tothere needs no reason for this

noun

the fact or an instance of feeling the lack of somethinghe has need of a new coat

a requirementthe need for vengeance

necessity or obligation resulting from some situationno need to be frightened

distress or extremitya friend in need

extreme poverty or destitution; penury

Word Origin for need

Old English nēad, nied; related to Old Frisian nēd, Old Saxon nōd, Old High German nōt

Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged 2012 Digital Edition
© William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins
Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012

Other Idioms and Phrases with need


In addition to the idiom beginning with need

  • needle in a haystack
  • needless to say
  • need like a hole in the head

also see:

  • cry for (crying need for).

The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary
Copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.

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