coerce
/kəʊˈɜːs/ (bre, ipa) · /kəʊˈɜːrs/ (ame, ipa) · /kō-ˈərs/ (ame, mw)
coerce — 動詞
- coercepresent simple I / you / we / they
- coerceshe / she / it
- coercedpast simple
- coercing-ing form
1. to make someone do something by threatening them or putting strong pressure on t
強迫;脅迫
用威脅或壓力迫使他人做不願意的事
to make someone do something by threatening them or putting strong pressure on them, so that they agree even though they do not want to.
The bank manager was coerced into opening the safe at gunpoint.
銀行經理在槍口下被脅迫打開保險箱。
passive: be coerced into + V-ing
Adina refused to coerce her younger brother into joining the family business.
Adina 拒絕強迫她的弟弟加入家族事業。
coerce + person + into + V-ing
Prosecutors said the gang had coerced witnesses into changing their statements.
檢察官表示,那個幫派曾脅迫證人更改證詞。
Arjun felt his old boss had coerced him into signing the contract without legal advice.
Arjun 覺得他的前老闆強迫他在沒有法律建議的情況下簽下合約。
No employee should ever be coerced into staying silent about safety problems at work.
任何員工都不應該被脅迫對職場上的安全問題保持沉默。
- force
more general; covers physical force too, while 'coerce' emphasises pressure or threats producing reluctant agreement
- compel
formal near-synonym; 'compel' can include moral or legal obligation, while 'coerce' implies improper or hostile pressure
- pressure
informal; lighter than 'coerce' and often without an explicit threat
- intimidate
focuses on creating fear; does not always lead to a specific demanded action the way 'coerce' does
文法句型
coerce + object + into + V-ing
coerce + object + into + noun
be coerced into doing something
用法筆記
Frequently passive (be coerced into doing something). The pressure must be strong — threats, force, intimidation, or serious consequences — not mere persuasion. Subject is typically a person, group, or institution with power over the object.