Meaning
Entail (verb) means to involve something as a necessary or unavoidable part or consequence. It often refers to duties, responsibilities, or conditions that naturally follow from an action or situation.
Grammar and Usage
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Part of speech: verb (transitive)
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Sentence patterns:
- "entail + noun" → The job entails long hours.
 - "be entailed in" → The risks are entailed in the project.
 
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Used mainly in formal or academic English.
 
Common Phrases
- entail responsibility – to involve taking responsibility
 - entail risk – to necessarily include risk
 - entail effort – to require significant work or effort
 - entail consequences – to bring about unavoidable outcomes
 
Collocations
- verb + entail: inevitably entail, necessarily entail, often entail
 - entail + noun: entail duties, entail obligations, entail difficulties, entail costs, entail consequences
 - adjective + noun + entail: complex process entails, legal issue entails
 
Examples
- The position entails a lot of travel across the country.
 - Building a business entails risk but also offers rewards.
 - Success in this exam entails hard work and discipline.
 - The new policy will entail additional costs for the company.
 - Becoming a parent entails great responsibility.
 - Freedom entails obligations as well as rights.
 - His proposal would entail significant changes in the current system.
 - The journey entails crossing dangerous terrain.
 - Accepting the role entails making sacrifices.
 - The decision entails serious consequences if handled poorly.
 
Synonyms or Related
- involve
 - necessitate
 - require
 - demand
 - call for
 
