Crossword-Solution: COERCIVE 8 letters, 38 clues 🏆 scrabble score: 15

Dictionary

Word Word Type Definition
Coercive a. Serving or intended to coerce; having power to constrain.

Anagrams

Word Anagrams
COERCIVE anagram ICECOVER

We have 38 clues for the answer “COERCIVE”

Clue Answers
Threatingly persuasive 1 answer
The antithesis of easy 1 answer
Tending to intimidate 1 answer
Like a blackmailer's tactics 1 answer
Constraining 3 answers
enforced 4 answers
terrorising 12 answers
Strong-arm 13 answers
Intimidating 29 answers
Bullying 31 answers
tying 31 answers
inhibiting 31 answers
bridling 32 answers
retarding 32 answers
qualifying 33 answers
obstructive 35 answers
Hobbling 35 answers
prohibitive 36 answers
Selective 37 answers
concluding 41 answers
compulsory 43 answers
controlling 44 answers
governing 47 answers
Obligatory 48 answers
regulating 48 answers
limiting 52 answers
restrictive 54 answers
provisional 54 answers
restraining 55 answers
confining 57 answers
Decisive 63 answers
Forceful 66 answers
compelling 67 answers
conditional 68 answers
Narrow 68 answers
Tight 71 answers
BINDING ___ 72 answers
Ultimate 75 answers
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Kind of apple
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Hint 1 meaning
One who, or that which, eats.
Hint 2 anagram
EARTE
Hint 3 another clue
greedy person
10 +1

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Sentences with COERCIVE (5)

Hackers are `control freaks' in a way that has nothing to do with the usual coercive or authoritarian connotations of the term.
The Jargon File, Version 2.9.10, 01 Jul 1992 Various 1992
Strether, with a kind coercive hand for it, assisted him to this consummation, and again found his own part in their relation auspiciously enlarged by the smaller touches of lowering the lamp and seeing to a sufficiency of blanket.
The Ambassadors Henry James 1996
She felt like a woman who did not know what she had been doing for the previous hour, but supposed with trepidation that the afternoon’s proceedings, though vague, had amounted to an engagement between herself and the handsome, coercive, irresistible Fitzpiers.
The Woodlanders Thomas Hardy 1996
The coercive homage which Augsburg, with many other cities, was forced to pay to the Swedish crown, bespoke the conqueror, rather than the protector of the empire; and this town, prouder of the title of a royal city, than of the higher dignity of the freedom of the empire, flattered itself with the anticipation of becoming the capital of his future kingdom.
The History of the Thirty Years' War Friedrich Schiller 1996
Philosophy has always professed to prove religious truth by coercive argument; and the construction of philosophies of this kind has always been one favorite function of the religious life, if we use this term in the large historic sense.
The Varieties of Religious Experience William James 2014

Quotes with COERCIVE (3)

For over a century and a half, anarchists have been arguing that coercive, hierarchical organization (as embodied in government and corporations) is not equivalent to organization per se (which they regard as necessary), and that coercive organization should be replaced by decentralized, nonhierarchical organization based on voluntary cooperation and mutual aid. This is hardly a rejection of organization.
Chaz Bufe Anarchism: What It Is & What It Isn't
This question of grades being coercive, and of politics being inherent in teaching, applies not only to writing, but to all fields. Mathematics, science, economics, history, religion, are all just as deeply and necessarily political. To believe they’re not — to believe, for example, that science (or mathematics, economics, history, religion, and so forth: choose your poison) describes the world as it is, rather than acting as a filter that removes all information that does no…
Derrick Jensen Walking on Water: Reading, Writing, and Revolution
Over the years we seem to have become habituated, even addicted, to the notion of radical threat, threat of the kind that can make virtually anything seem expendable if it does not serve an immediate, desperate purpose of self-defense -- as defined by people often in too high a state of alarm to make sound judgments about what real safety would be or how it might be achieved, and who feel that their duty to the rest of us is to be very certain we share their alarm. Putting to…
Marilynne Robinson When I Was a Child I Read Books
Where this answer appears

Appears in: CrosSynergy, Newsday, NYT, WSJ.

Used 5 times in crossword archives (1983–2014).