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nécessaire

Nécessaire is a French adjective meaning necessary, required, essential, or obligatory. It describes something that must be done, present, or used. The form is the same for masculine and feminine in the singular (un outil nécessaire, une raison nécessaire); the plural is nécessaire for both genders (les outils nécessaires, les raisons nécessaires). In everyday language, it is common to use synonyms such as essentiel, indispensable, or obligatoire.

As a noun, le nécessaire refers to the essential items or basic needs—the things one must have.

Etymology and related forms: nécessaire comes from Latin necessarius, from necessitas meaning necessity. It entered Old

Usage and grammar: in formal and standard French, il est nécessaire de + infinitive expresses a general

For
example,
on
peut
dire
“Tout
le
nécessaire
pour
partir
en
voyage”
meaning
all
the
basics
one
needs
to
travel.
The
plural
les
nécessaires
is
less
common
than
using
les
nécessités,
which
is
another
noun
form
conveying
the
idea
of
necessities.
French
as
necessaire
and
evolved
into
the
modern
adjective
and
noun.
It
is
cognate
with
English
necessary,
Spanish
necesario,
Italian
necessario,
and
other
Romance-language
equivalents.
necessity,
while
il
est
nécessaire
que
+
subjonctif
conveys
a
requirement
about
another
subject.
The
phrase
il
faut
que
is
a
more
idiomatic
alternative
in
many
contexts.
When
describing
something
as
necessary
for
a
purpose,
one
can
use
être
nécessaire
à
+
noun
or
à
+
infinitive
(e.g.,
un
outil
nécessaire
à
la
réparation).
The
word’s
gender
and
number
align
with
the
noun
it
modifies;
feminine
singular
is
the
same
spelling
as
masculine
singular,
and
both
plural
forms
are
nécessaires.