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Definition of entail verb from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

entail

verb
 
/ɪnˈteɪl/
 
/ɪnˈteɪl/
Verb Forms
present simple I / you / we / they entail
 
/ɪnˈteɪl/
 
/ɪnˈteɪl/
he / she / it entails
 
/ɪnˈteɪlz/
 
/ɪnˈteɪlz/
past simple entailed
 
/ɪnˈteɪld/
 
/ɪnˈteɪld/
past participle entailed
 
/ɪnˈteɪld/
 
/ɪnˈteɪld/
-ing form entailing
 
/ɪnˈteɪlɪŋ/
 
/ɪnˈteɪlɪŋ/
jump to other results
  1. to involve something that cannot be avoided synonym involve
    • entail something The job entails a lot of hard work.
    • What does the job actually entail?
    • be entailed in something They learn exactly what is entailed in caring for a newborn baby.
    • entail (somebody) doing something It will entail driving a long distance every day.
    Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadverb
    • actually
    • inevitably
    • necessarily
    See full entry
    Word Originlate Middle English (referring to settlement of property; formerly also as intail): from en-, in- ‘into’ + Old French taille ‘notch, tax’, from taillier ‘to cut’, based on Latin talea ‘twig, cutting’.
See entail in the Oxford Advanced American DictionarySee entail in the Oxford Learner's Dictionary of Academic English
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noun
 
 
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