coerce
英 [kəʊˈɜːs]
美 [koʊˈɝːs]
(记)co 共同 erce 谐音:饿死→共同饿死→因为被强制
2. exercise => coerce (同源词)。
coerce 胁迫co-, 强调。-erk, 限制,保护,词源同ark, arcane.
- coerce
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coerce: [17] The underlying etymological meaning of coerce is ‘restraining’ or ‘confining’. It comes from the Latin compound verb coercēre ‘constrain’, which was formed from the prefix co- ‘together’ and the verb arcēre ‘shut up, ward off’ (possibly a relative of Latin arca ‘chest, box’, from which English gets ark). An earlier, 15th-century, form of the English word was coherce, which came via Old French cohercier.
=> ark
- coerce (v.)
- mid-15c., cohercen, from Middle French cohercer, from Latin coercere "to control, restrain, shut up together," from com- "together" (see co-) + arcere "to enclose, confine, contain, ward off," from PIE *ark- "to hold, contain, guard" (see arcane). Related: Coerced; coercing. No record of the word between late 15c. and mid-17c.; its reappearance 1650s is perhaps a back-formation from coercion.
- 1. Clark had somehow been able to coerce Jenny into doing whatever he told her to do.
- 不知是用什么办法,克拉克总能让珍妮对他言听计从。
- 2. Obama would deploy soft power the power attract rather than coerce.
- 奥巴马将运用“巧实力外交”的拉拢性力量取代强制性力量.
- 3. To coerce or inhibit by or as if by threats.
- 威胁通过威胁或近乎威胁强制或禁止.
- 4. You can't coerce her into obedience.
- 你不能强制她服从.
- 5. I will never coerce you.
- 我永远不会强迫你们.