different between coercion vs requirement

coercion

English

Etymology

From Old French cohercion, from Latin coerciti? (magisterial coercion), from coercere, past participle coercitus (to restrain, coerce), from cum (with) + arce? (to shut in, enclose); see coerce.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ko?????n/, /ko?????n/

Noun

coercion (countable and uncountable, plural coercions)

  1. (not countable) Actual or threatened force for the purpose of compelling action by another person; the act of coercing.
  2. (law, not countable) Use of physical or moral force to compel a person to do something, or to abstain from doing something, thereby depriving that person of the exercise of free will.
  3. (countable) A specific instance of coercing.
  4. (programming, countable) Conversion of a value of one data type to a value of another data type.
  5. (linguistics, semantics) The process by which the meaning of a word or other linguistic element is reinterpreted to match the grammatical context.

Antonyms

  • noncoercion

Hyponyms

  • type coercion

Derived terms

Related terms

Translations

Trivia

One of three common words ending in -cion, which are coercion, scion, and suspicion.

References

  • coercion in The Century Dictionary, New York, N.Y.: The Century Co., 1911.
  • “coercion” in Dictionary.com Unabridged, Dictionary.com, LLC, 1995–present.
  • coercion in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, G. & C. Merriam, 1913.
  • coercion on Wikipedia.Wikipedia

Anagrams

  • criocone

coercion From the web:

  • what coercion means
  • what coercion a person to obey another
  • what's coercion in law
  • coercion what does it mean
  • coercion what is the definition
  • what is coercion in business law
  • what is coercion in java
  • what is coercion in javascript


requirement

English

Etymology

require +? -ment

Pronunciation

  • (UK) IPA(key): /???kw???m(?)nt/
  • (US) IPA(key): /???kwa??m?nt/, /???kw??m?nt/

Noun

requirement (plural requirements)

  1. A necessity or prerequisite; something required or obligatory. Its adpositions are generally of in relation to who or what has given it, on in relation to whom or what it is given to, and for in relation to what is required.
    There was a requirement of the government on citizens for paying taxes.
  2. Something asked.
  3. (engineering, computing) A statement (in domain specific terms) which specifies a verifiable constraint on an implementation that it shall undeniably meet or (a) be deemed unacceptable, or (b) result in implementation failure, or (c) result in system failure.

Usage notes

  • Adjectives often used with "requirement": stringent, complex, reasonable, mandatory, important, financial, medical, educational, physical, chemical
  • Verbs often used with "requirement": meet, comply with, satisfy, fulfill, impose, waive, abolish, drop, add, remove, fail to meet, ignore, understand, state, specify, increase, reduce, change, modify

Synonyms

  • (prerequisite): condition, prerequisite, necessity

Hyponyms

  • functional requirement
  • quality requirement

Related terms

  • requirements engineering
  • requirements analysis

Translations

Further reading

  • requirement at OneLook Dictionary Search

requirement From the web:

  • what requirements are needed to vote
  • what requirements are needed to be a teacher
  • what requirements are needed to be a police officer
  • what requirements to be a cop
  • what requirements to rent a car
  • what requirements to buy a house
  • what requirements to lease a car
  • what requirements for fha loan
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