OBLIGATORY - meaning and definition. What is OBLIGATORY
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What (who) is OBLIGATORY - definition

COURSE OF ACTION THAT SOMEONE IS REQUIRED TO TAKE, WHETHER LEGAL OR MORAL
Obligations; Moral obligation; Obligated; Obligatory; Obligates; Obligating; Obligatorily; Personal obligations

obligatory         
[?'bl?g?t(?)ri]
¦ adjective compulsory.
?(of a ruling) having binding force.
Derivatives
obligatorily adverb
obligatory         
1.
If something is obligatory, you must do it because of a rule or a law.
Most women will be offered an ultrasound scan during pregnancy, although it's not obligatory...
These rates do not include the charge for obligatory medical consultations.
= compulsory
? optional
ADJ
2.
If you describe something as obligatory, you mean that it is done from habit or custom and not because the person involved has thought carefully about it or really means it.
She was wearing the obligatory sweater and pearl necklace.
= customary
ADJ: ADJ n
obligatory         
a.
Binding, coercive.

Wikipedia

Obligation

An obligation is a course of action that someone is required to take, whether legal or moral. Obligations are constraints; they limit freedom. People who are under obligations may choose to freely act under obligations. Obligation exists when there is a choice to do what is morally good and what is morally unacceptable. There are also obligations in other normative contexts, such as obligations of etiquette, social obligations, religious, and possibly in terms of politics, where obligations are requirements which must be fulfilled. These are generally legal obligations, which can incur a penalty for non-fulfilment, although certain people are obliged to carry out certain actions for other reasons as well, whether as a tradition or for social reasons.

Obligations vary from person to person: for example, a person holding a political office will generally have far more obligations than an average adult citizen, who themselves will have more obligations than a child. Obligations are generally granted in return for an increase in an individual's rights or power.

Examples of use of OBLIGATORY
1. Nevertheless, this worship exercise is not obligatory.
2. In reply to a question you stated that «God has not made it obligatory for women to attend congregational prayers.» Does it mean that it is obligatory for men to say obligatory prayers in congregation?
3. "Itikaf is a Sunnah (not an obligatory deed), but taking care of ones family and their needs is an obligatory duty."
4. If he were to offer this prayer in the mosque every night, throughout Ramadan, people would over the years elevate it to the obligatory or semi–obligatory status.
5. It is certainly not obligatory, in either category of duty.