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Synonyms

coerced

American  
[koh-ursd] / koʊˈɜrsd /

adjective

  1. forced or compelled through intimidation or authority, especially without regard for individual volition.

    A judge decided that key evidence, obtained from a coerced 14-year-old boy, was unreliable.


verb

  1. the simple past tense and past participle of coerce.

Other Word Forms

  • uncoerced adjective

Etymology

Origin of coerced

coerce ( def. ) + -ed 2 ( def. )

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

“He had no reason to think that any woman was coerced into a forced marriage.”

From The Wall Street Journal

On Friday, they spent the entire four hours allocated for the day discussing a group of 21 amendments on safeguards designed to prevent people being coerced or encouraged into an assisted death.

From BBC

He said doctors had a legal right to strike and should not be "bullied or coerced" into working.

From BBC

A firsthand account by an escaped slave who became a famous abolitionist and orator, this memoir reframed slavery as coerced labor.

From The Wall Street Journal

His supporters say that in the days following his arrest in Jalandhar, he was tortured and coerced into signing a false confession to participation in the killings.

From BBC