coercion
nounEtymology
Inherited from Middle English cohercioun, from Old French cohercion, from Latin coërcitiō (“magisterial coercion”), from past participle coercitus of coërceō (“to restrain, coerce”), from co- (“with”) + arceō (“to shut in, enclose”); see coerce.
- derived from coërcitiō
- derived from cohercion
- inherited from cohercioun
Definitions
Actual or threatened force for the purpose of compelling action by another person
Actual or threatened force for the purpose of compelling action by another person; the act of coercing.
- One of the primary objectives of the foreign policy of the United States is the creation of conditions in which we and other nations will be able to work out a way of life free from coercion.
Use of physical or moral force to compel a person to do something, or to abstain from…
Use of physical or moral force to compel a person to do something, or to abstain from doing something, thereby depriving that person of the exercise of free will.
A specific instance of coercing.
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Conversion of a value of one data type to a value of another data type.
The process by which the meaning of a word or other linguistic element is reinterpreted…
The process by which the meaning of a word or other linguistic element is reinterpreted to match the grammatical context.
- But often the pieces of information do not fit together and have to be shifted in meaning to confirm with the rest of the sentence. These shifts are called coercion
- ...a conversion of mass nouns into count readings according to sorter and portion coercion is only possible if the denotation of a mass noun already comprises minimal parts into which the noun can be subdivided.
The initiation or threat of conflict
The initiation or threat of conflict; aggression.
The neighborhood
- antonymnoncoercion
- neighborcoerce
- neighborcoercer
- neighborcoercible
- neighborcoercitive
- neighborcoercive
- neighbortype coercion
Derived
Vish — recursive loop
No curated loop yet for coercion. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.
sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA