imperative

Etymology

Borrowed from Latin imperātīvus.

adj

  1. Essential; crucial; extremely important.
    That you come here right now is imperative.
    Meantime, alterations at King William Street had become imperative, and by December 22, 1895, the station had been remodelled, as at Stockwell, to provide an island platform with lines each side, and a scissors crossing. 1941 May, “Jubilee of the City Tube”, in Railway Magazine, page 224
    Give this document to Ozzy. It's imperative that he reads and understands it. Got it? 2019, Con Man Games, SmashGames, quoting Felix, Kindergarten 2, SmashGames
  2. (grammar) Of, or relating to the imperative mood.
  3. (computing theory) Having semantics that incorporates mutable variables.
  4. Expressing a command; authoritatively or absolutely directive.
    imperative orders

noun

  1. (uncountable, grammar) The grammatical mood expressing an order (see jussive). In English, the imperative form of a verb is the same as that of the bare infinitive.
    The verbs in sentences like "Do it!" and "Say what you like!" are in the imperative.
  2. (countable, grammar) A verb in imperative mood.
  3. (countable) An essential action, a must: something which is imperative.
    Visiting Berlin is an imperative.
    Anything grandiose or historically based tends to sound flat and banal when it reaches English, partly because translators get stuck between contradictory imperatives: juggling fidelity to the original sense with what is vocally viable, they tend to resort to a genteel fustian which lacks either poetic resonance or demotic realism, adding to a sense of artificiality rather than enhancing credibility. 1 March 2014, Rupert Christiansen, “English translations rarely sing”, in The Daily Telegraph (Review), page R19
    The new imperative for investment is the Government's objective to secure carbon-neutral transport emissions by 2040. December 2 2020, Industry Insider, “The costs of cutting carbon”, in Rail, page 76

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