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词汇 requisite
释义

Definition of requisite in English:

requisite

adjective ˈrɛkwɪzɪtˈrɛkwəzət
  • Made necessary by particular circumstances or regulations.

    必需的,必要的

    the application will not be processed until the requisite fee is paid

    必要的费用付讫后,才会受理申请。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • A man condemned in his own day for his sexual practices and lascivious writings, after his death he was crowned patron saint of the Surrealists, but was also requisite bedside reading for many a serial killer.
    • Inevitably, he's been given the less interesting of the two roles and does his best with it, hitting the requisite notes of sarcasm, brutality and integrity.
    • And nowhere is simplicity more requisite than when selling technology to mainstream consumers.
    • At the end of some of the early numbers, there was a sticky few seconds of silence before the requisite applause began.
    • Faltering asset prices would have at some point stymie requisite Credit growth and the house of cards would have come tumbling down.
    • Regardless of the precautions you take, your requisite insurance does not necessarily have to be expensive.
    • A Salient Editor needs to have a strong vision, and the requisite traits to make that vision a reality.
    • After 1982, anyone who wanted to operate a radio station had to fill out the requisite forms, buy the necessary equipment, and start broadcasting on a given FM frequency.
    • Charlie's Angels is a film that never takes the requisite conventions and demands of traditional narrative film-making too much to heart.
    • However, government's policies need to be in tandem with the strategic imperatives of the nation brand in order to reap the requisite synergies.
    • It's a Paris of the '60s - that most tumultuous and sentimentalized of decades - and comes with all the requisite anger, anxiousness and idealism.
    • To refute Gearty in the requisite detail would demand an article longer than his, so I shall just raise some questions.
    • Henry, after the requisite period of lying deathly pale in bed and mopping his face on the sheets, recovers.
    • The appraisal shows sufficient equity to bring payments current, escrow several months into the future and handle taxes and insurance as well as all the substantial requisite fees for the lender.
    • Scott trained at the Welsh College of Music and Drama, and suffered the requisite years of unemployment before breaking through.
    • A wedding is in many ways the penultimate dramatic premise - a family gathering on a large scale that is invariably accompanied by significant tensions, along with the requisite celebrations.
    • The rub is that I don't feel the requisite sensations, and never have, in the presence of the paintings themselves.
    • However, only a few of the dozen-strong cast have the requisite style to make the parody trenchant instead of merely silly.
    • I can't think what it would cost to furnish a single shot with, say, a street full of period cars, all polished or dirtied up to the requisite degree of authenticity.
    • Since he has passed the requisite security check, the Bureau has obviously forgotten about the incident, but the informant, if still alive, could destroy Michael's chances.
    Synonyms
    necessary, required, prerequisite, essential, indispensable, vital, needed, needful
    compulsory, obligatory, mandatory, stipulated, demanded, called-for, imperative
    French de rigueur
noun ˈrɛkwɪzɪtˈrɛkwəzət
  • A thing that is necessary for the achievement of a specified end.

    必需品,必要条件

    she believed privacy to be a requisite for a peaceful life

    她认为隐私是平静生活的必要条件。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • They are assumed to stock merchandise comprising all food groups plus basic household requisites such as soaps and cleaning materials.
    • For a composer to take part in building up a national style in this way, there were two requisites; he must have original power within himself, and he must have national musical traits to work upon.
    • So as if anyone informed on us, they wouldn't find the larger distill further down the creek which we had with the sugar and all the other requisites for that.
    • Thus although not as technologically driven as the modern world, the ancient and classical world none the less possessed all of the requisites for a realist international relations of power politics.
    • But we are all intensely aware of the fact that work and its corollary, employment, are essential requisites for most people to be able to live in dignity with at least a minimum of comfort and security.
    • But it's that unclear set of requisites that makes a meeting between the empowered and the disenfranchised so impossible.
    • The requisites always involve compromise, straddling, being here and there, some of the Anglo and some of the Latino culture, old world traditions and new ways of thinking about them.
    • Bold, aggressive, and controversial actions are likely to be requisites to save the island fox from extinction.
    • We argue that Henry lacked the requisites for effective political leadership.
    • It should be clear that the Fekete plan is the most desirable of the four because it solves the problem of credit in a non-inflationary way, and it comports with the requisites of a free and just society.
    • To begin with, Eisenman was not an alcoholic, as seems requisite for English intellectuals, but more properly a neurotic.
    • In contrast, numerous historians wrote that they considered ‘presidential personality and character’ to be critical requisites.
    • The interdependence between them creates a relationship that extends beyond the requisites of quality, price, delivery and service.
    • In fact, requisites for the intertwined interests in cultural survival and sustainable resource management might look something like the following list.
    • The UK government is attempting to illegally put the frighteners on smokers buying their requisites over the Internet, a dot.com has alleged.
    • Most techno performers find the requisites of rock band culture inappropriate to their needs.
    • The requisites for obtaining a facility installation permit are set out in Division 6.
    • ‘I have read that it was a saying of an ancient Greek that the first requisite for happiness was to be born in a famous city,’ he writes.
    • We designers should learn to understand that end-users each have their own set of preferences, prejudices, and requisites.
    • The idea has to be written down, and a document has to be created defining all the requisites for the new quest.
    Synonyms
    necessity, essential requirement, prerequisite, essential, precondition, specification, stipulation
    qualification
    Latin desideratum, sine qua non
    informal must

Derivatives

  • requisitely

  • adverb
    • He is a Senate candidate that could use some practical refinements of his requisitely arrogant and academic views on life and politics.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • It is requisitely scary in spots, funny in others.
      • Recorders, twinkling synths, handclaps, banjos, and glockenspiel accompany the requisitely shambling acoustic guitar on songs about tigers, monsters and growing up.
      • Calvin Klein models' faces are redrawn as skulls with requisitely and impossibly high cheekbones.
      • He looked requisitely adolescent, like a baby in need of a wet nurse, and possessed the ability to delude himself into thinking he could carry a tune.

Origin

Late Middle English: from Latin requisitus 'searched for, deemed necessary', past participle of requirere (see require).

Definition of requisite in US English:

requisite

adjectiveˈrekwəzətˈrɛkwəzət
  • Made necessary by particular circumstances or regulations.

    必需的,必要的

    the application will not be processed until the requisite fee is paid

    必要的费用付讫后,才会受理申请。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Charlie's Angels is a film that never takes the requisite conventions and demands of traditional narrative film-making too much to heart.
    • A wedding is in many ways the penultimate dramatic premise - a family gathering on a large scale that is invariably accompanied by significant tensions, along with the requisite celebrations.
    • Inevitably, he's been given the less interesting of the two roles and does his best with it, hitting the requisite notes of sarcasm, brutality and integrity.
    • To refute Gearty in the requisite detail would demand an article longer than his, so I shall just raise some questions.
    • The appraisal shows sufficient equity to bring payments current, escrow several months into the future and handle taxes and insurance as well as all the substantial requisite fees for the lender.
    • Regardless of the precautions you take, your requisite insurance does not necessarily have to be expensive.
    • At the end of some of the early numbers, there was a sticky few seconds of silence before the requisite applause began.
    • It's a Paris of the '60s - that most tumultuous and sentimentalized of decades - and comes with all the requisite anger, anxiousness and idealism.
    • Scott trained at the Welsh College of Music and Drama, and suffered the requisite years of unemployment before breaking through.
    • After 1982, anyone who wanted to operate a radio station had to fill out the requisite forms, buy the necessary equipment, and start broadcasting on a given FM frequency.
    • However, government's policies need to be in tandem with the strategic imperatives of the nation brand in order to reap the requisite synergies.
    • Faltering asset prices would have at some point stymie requisite Credit growth and the house of cards would have come tumbling down.
    • A man condemned in his own day for his sexual practices and lascivious writings, after his death he was crowned patron saint of the Surrealists, but was also requisite bedside reading for many a serial killer.
    • The rub is that I don't feel the requisite sensations, and never have, in the presence of the paintings themselves.
    • However, only a few of the dozen-strong cast have the requisite style to make the parody trenchant instead of merely silly.
    • Since he has passed the requisite security check, the Bureau has obviously forgotten about the incident, but the informant, if still alive, could destroy Michael's chances.
    • And nowhere is simplicity more requisite than when selling technology to mainstream consumers.
    • I can't think what it would cost to furnish a single shot with, say, a street full of period cars, all polished or dirtied up to the requisite degree of authenticity.
    • Henry, after the requisite period of lying deathly pale in bed and mopping his face on the sheets, recovers.
    • A Salient Editor needs to have a strong vision, and the requisite traits to make that vision a reality.
    Synonyms
    necessary, required, prerequisite, essential, indispensable, vital, needed, needful
nounˈrekwəzətˈrɛkwəzət
  • A thing that is necessary for the achievement of a specified end.

    必需品,必要条件

    she believed privacy to be a requisite for a peaceful life

    她认为隐私是平静生活的必要条件。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Thus although not as technologically driven as the modern world, the ancient and classical world none the less possessed all of the requisites for a realist international relations of power politics.
    • But we are all intensely aware of the fact that work and its corollary, employment, are essential requisites for most people to be able to live in dignity with at least a minimum of comfort and security.
    • But it's that unclear set of requisites that makes a meeting between the empowered and the disenfranchised so impossible.
    • To begin with, Eisenman was not an alcoholic, as seems requisite for English intellectuals, but more properly a neurotic.
    • We designers should learn to understand that end-users each have their own set of preferences, prejudices, and requisites.
    • They are assumed to stock merchandise comprising all food groups plus basic household requisites such as soaps and cleaning materials.
    • In fact, requisites for the intertwined interests in cultural survival and sustainable resource management might look something like the following list.
    • We argue that Henry lacked the requisites for effective political leadership.
    • The idea has to be written down, and a document has to be created defining all the requisites for the new quest.
    • Bold, aggressive, and controversial actions are likely to be requisites to save the island fox from extinction.
    • So as if anyone informed on us, they wouldn't find the larger distill further down the creek which we had with the sugar and all the other requisites for that.
    • The UK government is attempting to illegally put the frighteners on smokers buying their requisites over the Internet, a dot.com has alleged.
    • The requisites for obtaining a facility installation permit are set out in Division 6.
    • The requisites always involve compromise, straddling, being here and there, some of the Anglo and some of the Latino culture, old world traditions and new ways of thinking about them.
    • ‘I have read that it was a saying of an ancient Greek that the first requisite for happiness was to be born in a famous city,’ he writes.
    • For a composer to take part in building up a national style in this way, there were two requisites; he must have original power within himself, and he must have national musical traits to work upon.
    • It should be clear that the Fekete plan is the most desirable of the four because it solves the problem of credit in a non-inflationary way, and it comports with the requisites of a free and just society.
    • In contrast, numerous historians wrote that they considered ‘presidential personality and character’ to be critical requisites.
    • The interdependence between them creates a relationship that extends beyond the requisites of quality, price, delivery and service.
    • Most techno performers find the requisites of rock band culture inappropriate to their needs.
    Synonyms
    necessity, essential requirement, prerequisite, essential, precondition, specification, stipulation

Origin

Late Middle English: from Latin requisitus ‘searched for, deemed necessary’, past participle of requirere (see require).

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