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obligatory
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
obligatory
adjective
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ Evening dress is usual, but not obligatory.
▪ It is now obligatory for all competitors to wear face protectors.
▪ Military service is obligatory for all men between 18 and 27.
▪ Voting is obligatory for Brazilians aged 18 to 69.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ Appreciation of this reality begins with the popular, indeed obligatory, definition of work.
▪ Award-winning magician Oscar Mu oz also pulls the obligatory rabbit out of the hat, and even produces a bird or two.
▪ By the time I had done the obligatory 20-minute brushwork on Vaquero, my arms ached.
▪ For their part the priests declared that without such obligatory gifts they would not be able to survive.
▪ In front is a lush, densely landscaped yard; in back is the obligatory pool.
▪ The obligatory standing ovation when he first entered the game against the Golden State Warriors lasted less than a minute.
▪ The truth is that obligatory recycling protects markets as well as the environment.
▪ They sent out the obligatory memo both before and after the project.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Obligatory

Obligatory \Ob"li*ga*to*ry\, a. [L. obligatorius: cf. F. obligatoire.] Binding in law or conscience; imposing duty or obligation; requiring performance or forbearance of some act; -- often followed by on or upon; as, obedience is obligatory on a soldier.

As long as the law is obligatory, so long our obedience is due.
--Jer. Taylor.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
obligatory

c.1400, from Old French obligatoire "creating an obligation, obligatory," and directly from Late Latin obligatorius "binding," from obligat-, past participle stem of obligare (see oblige).

Wiktionary
obligatory

a. 1 Imposing obligation, morally or legally; binding. 2 Requiring a matter or obligation.

WordNet
obligatory
  1. adj. morally or legally constraining or binding; "attendance is obligatory"; "an obligatory contribution" [ant: optional]

  2. required by obligation or compulsion or convention; "he made all the obligatory apologies"

Usage examples of "obligatory".

Getting down from his upper bunk for roll call, Berel Jastrow murmurs the obligatory Hear O Israel morning devotion.

Though attendance at public ceremonies on such holidays was not obligatory, feriae traditionally demanded that business, labor and lawsuits not be pursued, and that quarrels, even private ones, should be avoided.

A man of knowledge needs frugality because the majority of the obligatory acts deal with instances or with elements that are either outside the boundaries of ordinary everyday life, or are not customary in ordinary activity, and the man who has to act in accordance with them needs an extraordinary effort every time he takes action.

Rudely heckled, he is thoroughly disconcerted by the time the obligatory laurel wreath arrives to honor his presence.

Minutes after Earl had made the obligatory phone call to Betty Raye on behalf of the Democratic Party of Missouri to say how sorry he was to hear about the bad news, he was locked in a back room of a cheap hotel with several friends, trying his best to keep from smiling as he plotted his next move.

Tanner put on obligatory smiles, then Styler opened his briefcase and flipped through some papers.

The Catholic religion had been compulsory in South Ireland from 1944 until 1980, and the Erse language, although that was largely corrupted by unavoidable English words and locutions, had also been made obligatory.

She ran upstairs to get her mother, and once she was sure that a protesting Margaret Meadows was safely installed in the bathroom in order to apply her obligatory layers of make-up, Karen ran downstairs again to make DS Malone and DC Parkin tea while they waited.

But by using the obligatory measuring glasses and scales, he learned the language of perfumery, and he sensed instinctively that the knowledge of this language could be of service to him.

Such repeated attacks were mercifully infrequent, and Anna Grigoryevna attributes the one she describes to the nervous strain, as well as the obligatory overindulgence in drink, of the postnuptial visits.

Genevieve Turcotte made the obligatory introductions, while her partner looked on with a quirky smile and an amused twinkle in his eye.

The culture dictated that the evening start with a barbecue and then continue with the now obligatory Retsina drinking contest.

To any dependent intelligence blessed with our human susceptibilities, reverential love and submission are as obligatory, natural, and becoming on the brink of annihilation as on the verge of immortality.

So he invented the tricolor cockade as an obligatory badge of patriotic identity.

If Bazargan had had a choice, Allen would not be filling the obligatory graduate-student position on this scientific expedition, which already had too many anomalies surrounding it.