Entail in a sentence as a noun

What would that entail, and would I have the prove the bugs in the code were not my fault?

A story entitled: "Why you don't steel from a Texan" would generally entail the thief getting shot.

Why not just ban everything even slightly fun, because fun things usually entail some risk?

The result of a whole lot of new found liberties all at once, with no real grasp of what the small prints attached really entail.

We also try to innoculate our process by communicating in as much excruciating detail as we can what it will entail.

Adding generics would not entail adding inheritance, mandating the factory pattern, or any other slippery ***** feature.

Entail in a sentence as a verb

Creating such a key requires little skill, leaves behind no evidence, and does not entail engaging in recognizably suspicious behavior.

What I realised is that a classically "awful" sweatshop would be entail a spectacular improvement in both salaries and working conditions, compared to the alternatives.

If not, what about the user confusion that would entail?Regardless of the answer to this question, I expect in an AID world everyone would start using external domains for the stronger guarantees they provide.

There is very little to suggest that technological progress is about to take on a fundamentally different character, or entail much different results, than it has had, and has done, throughout the course of human history.

And--believe it or not--these kinds of highly-social games, and one's success in them on Wikipedia, are a major factor in getting elected "administrator", at which point your duties now entail judging these lawyering games and actually deleting the articles!

Entail definitions

noun

land received by fee tail

noun

the act of entailing property; the creation of a fee tail from a fee simple

verb

have as a logical consequence; "The water shortage means that we have to stop taking long showers"

See also: imply mean

verb

impose, involve, or imply as a necessary accompaniment or result; "What does this move entail?"

See also: implicate

verb

limit the inheritance of property to a specific class of heirs

See also: fee-tail