12 example sentences using necessitate.
Necessitate used in a sentence
Necessitate in a sentence as a verb
"Freedom and security necessitate not just being allowed a peek at the code.
While it doesn't necessitate things like Dual_EC and extended_random, it does create a hospitable environment for their inclusion.
Allowing the ability to search for content would necessitate getting rid of their whole privacy scheme.
Were he to clear the backlog as it came in, the flow of work would be very uneven, and that would necessitate all sorts of other overhead costs.
Once you're fully enamored with prefix notation, you never find yourself wishing for the kinds of grammar that necessitate this kind of work.
It doesn't necessitate an all-powerful state, as far as I'm aware that's largely an idea made up to scare people into compliance with capitalism.
The other three are priorities that necessitate policies that discourage investment and competition.
The problems described sound like they could be an issue of poorly tuned heuristics/thresholds, or necessitate some extra machinery inside the OS X memory manager that isn't there currently.
Just pointing out some basic logic that may or may not be present in the above, but is not apparent either way: Just because one solution fails, it does not necessitate "all solutions fail, the right answer is no solutions".
Different application's various heap profiles necessitate using them in high performance applications.
A product/company acquisition with large assets written in common lisp would necessitate this becoming the "Google Common lisp style guide" rather than what it was most likely originally the "ITA Software" common lisp style guide.
Understand > the trade-offs being made and the factors that led to them; > understand temporary solutions and the priorities that necessitate > them, but don't accept a decision that you feel is wrong without > raising the issue and getting a better understanding.
Necessitate definitions
require as useful, just, or proper; "It takes nerve to do what she did"; "success usually requires hard work"; "This job asks a lot of patience and skill"; "This position demands a lot of personal sacrifice"; "This dinner calls for a spectacular dessert"; "This intervention does not postulate a patient's consent"
cause to be a concomitant