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The phrase "a kind of need" is correct and usable in written English.
You can use it when describing a specific type or category of need that someone may have.
Example: "In times of crisis, there is often a kind of need for reassurance and support from loved ones."
Alternatives: "a type of need" or "a sort of need".
Exact(2)
It was a kind of need to make music which enable me to overcome shyness and get on stage".
When you perceive someone else in a kind of need, offer help simply, fully and without feeling superior.
Similar(58)
Coming to your father with a need, any kind of need.
To many Chinese, Mr. Trump came to Beijing as a kind of supplicant, needing help on critical issues.
"This idea that poverty is a kind of pathology needs to be attacked, and it is a particular responsibility for any academic from Africa.
Like their individual residents, cities have a kind of hierarchy of needs.
"When you're operating a camera as a SEAL, you kind of need to become a SEAL," he said.
It seems that Ms. Black also knows a thing or two about an altogether different kind of need.
It's a very different kind of need that's been pointed out and why we've worked so hard to strengthen derivatives regulation.
But that was a kind of acting that needed high challenge and very demanding company.
The only slight issue is that it only works off of a cellular connection and not WiFi so you kind of need a halfway decent signal to stream.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com