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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
necessarily
adverb
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADJECTIVE
mean
▪ That doesn't necessarily mean playing him as one of the two central midfielders.
▪ This does not necessarily mean businesses must avoid all such one-of-a-kinds whatever their nature.
▪ In any case, for the dependency theorists, development did not necessarily mean Western-style industrialisation.
▪ Being able to work with others does not necessarily mean fitting in in a conventional sense.
true
▪ Truths of geometry can be proved, and so known not only to be true but also to be necessarily true.
▪ She may say things about me from time to time that aren't necessarily true just to get back at me, you know?
▪ But that is not necessarily true of television.
▪ It is, therefore, claimed that the desire of the theist to make a necessarily true statement of fact is impossible.
▪ Inferences or conclusions based on deductive reasoning are necessarily true only if the premises they are derived from are true.
▪ Understanding implies recognition, but the converse is not necessarily true.
▪ People assume that younger parents have more time and patience, but this is not necessarily true.
■ VERB
follow
▪ But the allocation of library resources between subjects does not necessarily follow a logical or easily summarized method.
▪ Just because women gain more power in the workplace, it does not necessarily follow that they will behave more like men.
▪ Of course, it does not follow necessarily that it is the cult that is responsible for the lower rate of suicide.
▪ Surprisingly, the language problems produced by other forms of damage do not necessarily follow these principles derived from stroke patients.
▪ It was conceded by pursuer's counsel that if the first two propositions were correct, then the third would necessarily follow.
▪ Where an intake of breath is not necessarily followed by an exhalation.
▪ Bukharin went on, however, to make a leap that did not necessarily follow from his previous line of thought.
▪ Yet this does not necessarily follow.
imply
▪ Competition and struggle may be the watchwords but this does not necessarily imply outright hostility.
▪ Therefore, it does not necessarily imply an out-of-control situation. 66.
▪ Accountability usually presupposes evaluation, but evaluation does not necessarily imply accountability.
▪ While this does not necessarily imply causality, it does suggest that the climate was compatible with public acceptance.
▪ What Polybius has in common with Cato, especially about the Roman constitution, does not necessarily imply that he read Cato.
▪ But does this necessarily imply more intense faith?
▪ The phrase is a familiar one but this does not necessarily imply that there is universal agreement over its meaning.
▪ However, the rapid increase in the number of science policy-making organs does not necessarily imply efficiency.
involve
▪ This will necessarily involve some interaction between the different levels of analysis.
▪ This does not necessarily involve affirming it.
▪ Care, however, must be taken here: dispute settlement does not necessarily involve legal machinery.
▪ This policy necessarily involves the interest rate fluctuating with the demand for money.
▪ The regulation of insider dealing necessarily involves a complex assessment of the available regulatory options.
▪ In a minority situation, some form of power-sharing - even if it did not necessarily involve coalition - was inevitable.
▪ All that is necessarily involved is a sense of belonging that excludes indifference to the group as well as alienation from it.
▪ The specification of such regression models necessarily involves many assumptions.
lead
▪ Restricting car access does not necessarily lead to a loss of trade.
▪ Actually it is wrong to think that your present diet will necessarily lead to a long and productive life.
▪ The abolition of some second-tier authorities in the mid-1980s did not, however, necessarily lead to corresponding savings.
▪ This implies that reductions in X- inefficiency do not necessarily lead to net welfare improvements for consumers.
▪ Neither creative nor conventional paths will necessarily lead to an acceptable solution in every case.
▪ But leisure itself does not necessarily lead to art, literature, or science Special cultural conditions are needed.
▪ The transformation of the problematic does not necessarily lead to a transformation of the form of validity of knowledge.
▪ The trouble is, this does not necessarily lead to greater understanding of why something represents good practice.
reflect
▪ This approach by no means necessarily reflects lack of sympathy for the lot of the least privileged in society.
▪ But voting patterns do not necessarily reflect bigotry.
▪ The strength of agencies will thus not necessarily reflect the popularity of their policies.
▪ It does not necessarily reflect the trading position of the company as a whole.
▪ They do not necessarily reflect or indicate any academic achievement.
▪ The views he expresses here are his own, and do not necessarily reflect those of Survivors Speak Out.
▪ That employment pattern is not necessarily reflected in many areas these days.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ Income tax laws are necessarily complicated.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ Education must necessarily be about skill acquisition and content learning as well as development.
▪ He is not necessarily a typical patronage worker, but he is not unusual.
▪ That doesn't necessarily mean playing him as one of the two central midfielders.
▪ The arguments advanced by methodological individualists do not necessarily escape these problems.
▪ The course wasn't necessarily seen as all that important at first - it got fitted in.
▪ The first aspect of the accrual concept states that revenue earned does not necessarily correspond to the receipt of cash.
▪ The historical lack of fiscal discipline will not necessarily improve simply because the goal has been locked into the Constitution.
▪ These crafts are not necessarily the monopoly of any one group of animals.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Necessarily

Necessarily \Nec"es*sa*ri*ly\, adv. In a necessary manner; by necessity; unavoidably; indispensably.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
necessarily

mid-15c., "inevitably, unavoidably," from necessary (adj.) + -ly (2).

Wiktionary
necessarily

adv. inevitably; of necessity.

WordNet
necessarily
  1. adv. in an essential manner; "such expenses are necessarily incurred" [syn: needfully] [ant: unnecessarily]

  2. in such a manner as could not be otherwise; "it is necessarily so"; "we must needs by objective" [syn: inevitably, of necessity, needs]

  3. as a highly likely consequence; "we are necessarily bound for federalism in Europe"

Usage examples of "necessarily".

But as absolutely crucial and important as experiential disclosures are, they can be finally assimilated only in a subjective structure that grows and evolves to meet the demand, and experiences thrown at a subject do not necessarily and profoundly grow the subject itself.

The ecotheorists further take this metabiological absolutizing and not only attempt to explain culture with its terms, but also necessarily see culture as a lamentable deviation from those terms: all conclusions guaranteed by the prior absolutizing.

The principles of everything we are acquainted with must necessarily have been revealed to those from whom we have received them by the great, supreme principle, which contains them all.

Remember: You are not necessarily the customer, and when a program exists that complements your product or service, you should certainly include such programming in your advertising schedule.

Saddam is not necessarily apocalyptic, but he will do anything to stave off his own overthrow and has absolutely no moral constraints on his actions.

But we are not necessarily restricted to the limits of the nameable in this matter, so that it is of no argumentative importance whether or not this suggested method is the method which the supposed Mind actually adopts, seeing that there may still be other possible methods, which, nevertheless, we are unable to suggest.

There were also rumours and fairytales: of alien digs beneath the crust, evidence that the chasm had in some sense been artefactual, if not necessarily deliberate.

We will have to examine this Nature, the Intellectual, which our reasoning identifies as the authentically existent and the veritable essential: but first we must take another path and make certain that such a principle does necessarily exist.

Fast two-legged creatures must necessarily perform in similar ways, however ridiculous a man may appear when behaving as a kangaroo.

But if, on the other hand, the positive school of criminology denies, on the ground of researches in scientific physiological psychology, that the human will is free and does not admit that one is a criminal because he wants to be, but declares that a man commits this or that crime only when he lives in definitely determined conditions of personality and environment which induce him necessarily to act in a certain way, then alone does the problem of the origin of criminality begin to be submitted to a preliminary analysis, and then alone does criminal law step out of the narrow and arid limits of technical jurisprudence and become a true social and human science in the highest and noblest meaning of the word.

As they strolled from the room, necessarily separating in the pink, Van Deef was heard replying that he was already tempted unbearably, or words to that effect.

As sovereignty was not delegated by the States, it was necessarily reserved.

A secretary of an embassy, whom I knew some years after, told me that a paid informer, with two other witnesses, also, doubtless, in the pay of this grand tribunal, had declared that I was guilty of only believing in the devil, as if this absurd belief, if it were possible, did not necessarily connote a belief in God!

He probably also knows that Freddy has a finger in a few dodgy pies, without necessarily knowing just what they are.

If the doorkeeper sees clearly, one might have doubts about that, but if the doorkeeper is deceived, the deception must necessarily carry over to the man.