coerce somebody into (doing) something• Churchill then wanted to coerce the owners into a nationalagreement and statutoryarbitration.• Such desires may involvecoercing the woman intobehaving in the way the man wants her to.• Yet it must be by sanemeans that he trick and coerce the crew into following him.• Then, despite the light, the whistlecoerced itself into his dreams.• You tried to coerce her intomarrying Liu Shengli in violation of the MarriageLaw.• In many cases, young women are coerced or bribed into relationships with older men.• Attempts to coerce people intoretiring must be resisted; rights to retraining must also be secured.• Instead of being coerced or bludgeoned into submission, the CelticChurch was simply subsumed.
Origincoerce
(1400-1500)Latincoercere, from co- ( → CO-) + arcere“to enclose”