0 present participle of coerce
1 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.
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.
But an aspectual transition is required to combine it with an event, as it requires coercing this event into a state.
States and intergovernmental agencies held power over the displaced - coercing them into moving, incarcerating them and determining their resettlement or repatriation.
The role of text, whether written or spoken, is recognised as equal or dominant to that of drawing in coercing built architecture into existence.
If so, is that because its members share a cooperative identity that includes a norm against any one of them coercing or interfering with another?
All monotypes are polytypes and mono provides a way of coercing a monotype into a polytype.
Some proclaim their devotion to popular support but control mobilisation, even coercing civilian involvement.
We assume the existence of helper functions for looking up identifiers in an environment and for coercing values to constant expressions.