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coercion
(redirected from Arm twisting)

   Also found in: Medical, Legal, Encyclopedia, Wikipedia 0.01 sec.
co·er·cion  (k-ûrzhn, -shn)
n.
1. The act or practice of coercing.
2. Power or ability to coerce.

co·ercion·ary (-zh-nr, -sh-) adj.

coercion [kəʊˈɜːʃən]
n
1. the act or power of coercing
2. government by force
coercionist  n
coercive  [kəʊˈɜːsɪv] adj
coercively  adv
coerciveness  n

Coercion 

(See also EXTORTION.)

force [someone’s] hand To pressure someone into taking a stand or revealing his beliefs or intentions; to compel someone to act immediately and against his will. In print since the mid-19th century, this expression perhaps derives from card games in which one player forces another to play a particular card and thereby reveal the contents of his hand. Another possible theory is that force [someone’s] hand is like twist [someone’s] arm, suggesting that the present figurative use derives from actual physical force.

knobstick wedding The forced marriage of a pregnant, unwed woman; a shotgun wedding. Churchwardens (lay officers who dealt with the secular affairs of the church and who were the legal representatives of the parish) formerly used their authority to ensure such marriages. The term knobstick ‘a knobbed stick, cane, or club used chiefly as a weapon’ refers to the churchwarden’s staff, the symbol of his office, used as an instrument of coercion, or cudgel.

put the screws to To compel action by exercise of coercion, pressure, extortion, blackmail, etc. The expression derives from an early method of torture involving the use of thumbscrews to extract confessions.

put the squeeze on To pressure another for one’s own purposes; to demand payment or performance by means of harassment or threats.

She hired me to put the squeeze on Linda for a divorce. (Raymond Chandler, High Window, 1942)

shotgun wedding Any union, compromise, agreement, etc., brought about by necessity or threat; originally a wedding necessitated or hastened by the bride-to-be’s pregnancy, a forced marriage; also shotgun marriage. The allusion is to an irate father attempting to protect his daughter’s reputation by using a shotgun to threaten the man responsible for her condition into marrying her. Use of the expression dates from at least 1927.

Werdel … characterized the Brannan plan as a “shotgun wedding between agriculture and labor.” (California Citrograph, January, 1950)

when push comes to shove See EXACERBATION.

ThesaurusLegend:  Synonyms Related Words Antonyms
Noun1.coercion - the act of compelling by force of authority
terror - the use of extreme fear in order to coerce people (especially for political reasons); "he used terror to make them confess"
enforcement - the act of enforcing; ensuring observance of or obedience to
2.coercion - using force to cause something to occur; "though pressed into rugby under compulsion I began to enjoy the game"; "they didn't have to use coercion"
causation, causing - the act of causing something to happen
constructive eviction, eviction - action by a landlord that compels a tenant to leave the premises (as by rendering the premises unfit for occupancy); no physical expulsion or legal process is involved

coercion
noun force, pressure, threats, bullying, constraint, intimidation, compulsion, duress, browbeating, strong-arm tactics (informal) It was vital that the elections should be free of coercion or intimidation.
Translations
coercion [kəʊˈɜːʃən] Ncoacción f
under coercionobligado a ello, a la fuerza
coercion [kəʊˈɜːrʃən] ncontrainte f
coercion
nZwang m; (Jur) → Nötigung f
coercion [kəʊˈɜːʃn] nforza (Law) → coercizione f


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The deal to build a biotech center in New York took five years and required a considerable amount of arm twisting, but today the mayor announced Alexandria Real Estate Equities would get the honors.
Byline: Dan Cumminin I HAVE followed the deba te over tuition fees very closely over recent months,and as I watched the final 24 hours it struck me that among the arm twisting by whips, deals betw een Ministers and potential rebels,and no doubt much more that we will never hear ab out, the one voice that did not feature was that of the ordinary person -the voters who put these people into office in the first place.
It didn't take much arm twisting on my part for our staff to become involved.
 
 
 
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