need
(nēd)
[Middle English nede, from Old English nēod, nēd, distress, necessity.]
noun
- A condition or situation in which something is required or wanted: crops in need of water; a need for affection.
- Something required or wanted; a requisite: “Those of us who led the charge for these women's issues … shared a common vision in the needs of women” (Olympia Snowe)
- Necessity; obligation: There is no need for you to go.
- A condition of poverty or misfortune: The family is in dire need.
verb: need·ed, need·ing, needs.
verb
- To be under the necessity of or the obligation to: They need not come.
transitive verb
- To have need of; require: The family needs money. See synonyms at lack
intransitive verb
- To be in need or want.
- To be necessary.
usage note
Usage Note: Depending on the sense, the verb need behaves sometimes like an auxiliary verb (such as can or may ) and sometimes like a main verb (such as want or try ). When used as a main verb, need agrees with its subject, takes to before the verb following it, and combines with do in questions, negations, and certain other constructions: He needs to go. Does he need to go so soon? He doesn't need to go. When used as an auxiliary verb, need does not agree with its subject, does not take to before the verb following it, and does not combine with do: He needn't go. Need he go so soon? The auxiliary forms of need are used primarily in present-tense questions, negations, and conditional clauses. Unlike can and may, auxiliary need has no form for the past tense like could and might.