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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
coercive
adjective
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ NOUN
power
▪ A modern capitalist state can not openly use coercive powers to help one class accumulate capital at the expense of others.
▪ Once dissociated from coercive power, it will witness a renewal of spirituality.
▪ The husband had coercive powers to govern most aspects of a woman's life, particularly through his control of money.
▪ These forms of power are commonly known as reward and coercive power respectively.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ The police may have used coercive tactics to get confessions.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ A modern capitalist state can not openly use coercive powers to help one class accumulate capital at the expense of others.
▪ Direct Actions 6.1 Ecological expropriation comes down to the coercive transfer of nonpublic land to public owners in the name of conservation.
▪ Non-cooperation and civil disobedience, as Gandhi understands them, can not be construed as a coercive threat in this sense.
▪ Petitioner contends that the coercive nature of this program is evident from the degree of success it has achieved.
▪ The elite and class approaches are based on a coercive view of society.
▪ This exercise of economic power could be coercive, in the sense that A might prevent B from enjoying certain economic benefits.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Coercive

Coercive \Co*er"cive\, a. Serving or intended to coerce; having power to constrain. -- Co*er"cive*ly, adv. -- Co*er"cive*ness, n.

Coercive power can only influence us to outward practice.
--Bp. Warburton.

Coercive force or Coercitive force (Magnetism), the power or force which in iron or steel produces a slowness or difficulty in imparting magnetism to it, and also interposes an obstacle to the return of a bar to its natural state when active magnetism has ceased. It plainly depends on the molecular constitution of the metal.
--Nichol.

The power of resisting magnetization or demagnization is sometimes called coercive force.
--S. Thompson.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
coercive

c.1600, from coerce + -ive. Form coercitive (attested from 1630s) is more true to Latin.

Wiktionary
coercive

a. Displaying a tendency or intent to coerce.

WordNet
coercive

adj. serving or intended to coerce; "authority is directional instead of coercive"

Usage examples of "coercive".

And that brought on another row, as the forester lashed out again with his enhanced PK function and Aiken fought back with his coercive power, trying to make Raimo ram his own forefinger down his throat.

But even as Americans correctly contrasted the freedom of the American way of life with the coercive constraints of life in the Communist bloc, they often forgot the seductive constraints of their own seemingly apolitical system.

Slavery, servitude, and all the other guises of the coercive organization of labor-from coolieism in the pacific and peonage in Latin America to apartheid in South Africa-are all essential elements internal to the processes of capitalist development.

He would take on clients to increase his kudos, the level of which would increase proportionally the more powerful were the people he tailored for, so that somebody in a position of civil power would constitute a favoured client, even if that position of power had come about through a lottery, some arcanely complicated rota system or plain old coercive voting - jobs like that of City Administrator were subject to all those regimes and more, depending on the band or zone concerned, or just which city was involved.

Gandhi himself and many of his followers would claim that the techniques of Satyagraha are only a marshalling of the forces of sympathy, public opinion, and the like, and that they are persuasive rather than coercive.

The Samoans preferred self-government, and Solf, lacking sufficient coercive means, could defeat them only by practising the same political shrewdness and guile as the Samoans themselves, dealing with them in accordance with Samoan concepts of power, pride and prestige rather than with German ones.

The next day, the United States and Great Britain launched Operation Desert Fox, the mission they had halted in November, a limited punitive operation uncoupled from any coercive demands on Saddam.

In the end, the Principals decided in favor of a punitive response rather than a coercive campaign.

Users resent the intrusion, are incensed by the coercive tactics of advertisers, nerve wrecked by protracted download times, and unnerved by the content of many of the ads.

The people of the States adopting the secession ordinances were far more unanimous in supporting secession than the people of the other States were in sustaining the Government in its efforts to suppress the rebellion by coercive measures.

Gately disastrously decides to go ahead and allow a nonviolent burglary to become in effect a robbery which the operative legal difference involves either violence or the coercive threat of same and Gately draws himself up to his full menacing height and shines his flashlight in the little homeowner's rheumy eyes and addresses him the way menacing criminals speak in popular entertainment d's for th's, various apocopes, and so on and takes hold of the guy's ear and conducts him down to a kitchen chair and binds his arms and legs to the chair with electrical cords neatly clipped from refrigerator and can-opener and M.

These include: possession of nuclear weapons, possession of unlimited autonomous replicators [see: gray goo], coercive assimilationism [see: borganism, aggressive], coercive halting of Turing-equivalent personalities [see: basilisks], and applied theological engineering [see: God bothering].

She snapped her enameled fingers and delivered a reproving coercive tap to her Chinese Shar-Pei puppy, which was poised to pounce upon the tail of Noetic Concordance's dignified Azawakh gazehound.

At one of their con­ferences, which took place in the Soviet embassy in Vienna, a person from your Bioenergetics Institute named Simonov exerted coercive and mind-altering force upon the American President, throwing him into a state of confusion and irrationality that still persists.

And what is Foucault's biopowerthe "modern danger"if not, in large part, the systems/instrumental mentality biologized and applied to humans, converting each and all to strands and means in the great interlocking bio-webthe chief form of coercive power in the modern world?