0 to persuade someone forcefully to do something that they are unwilling to do:
The court heard that the six defendants had been coerced into making a confession.
1 to persuade someone forcefully to do something that he or she may not want to do:
It is a rather elegant tool one can use to engage in social activities and share ideas or perhaps coerce others to share their toys.
Nevertheless, he believed that in order to make such an inference ' respectable ', he had to coerce it into the straightjacket of the syllogistic formula.
The point to be emphasized here is that such insight and understanding cannot be coerced or instilled by forcibly imposed punishment.
For others, such voluntary or coerced use of equity will not be such an issue.
The same strong coercion can be used to make this possible, with a module that contains two types, one coerced to each.
We need a preliminary fact about proofs for the case in which a node labeled (coerce) follows a node labeled (abs).
The legitimization is a kind of coercion, but some stretches in this speech are strategically designed predominantly to coerce.
Conversions after this date would be declared void in order to minimize the incentives the bands would have in coercing the population during the census.