different between incarceration vs duress

incarceration

English

Etymology

From Old French incarceration, from Medieval Latin incarceratio

Pronunciation

  • Rhymes: -e???n

Noun

incarceration (countable and uncountable, plural incarcerations)

  1. The act of confining, or the state of being confined; imprisonment.
  2. (surgery, dated) strangulation, as in hernia.
  3. A constriction of the hernial sac, rendering it irreducible, but not great enough to cause strangulation.

Derived terms

Related terms

  • incarcerate

Translations

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duress

English

Etymology

Borrowed into Middle English from Old French duresse, from Latin duritia (hardness), from durus (hard).

Pronunciation

  • (UK) IPA(key): /dj????s/, /d??????s/
  • (US) IPA(key): /du???s/
  • Rhymes: -?s

Noun

duress (uncountable)

  1. (obsolete) Harsh treatment.
    • 1790, Edmund Burke, Reflections on the Revolution in France
      The agreements [] made with the landlords during the time of slavery, are only the effect of duress and force.
  2. Constraint by threat.
  3. (law) Restraint in which a person is influenced, whether by lawful or unlawful forceful compulsion of their liberty by monition or implementation of physical enforcement; legally for the incurring of civil liability, of a citizen's arrest, or of subrogation, or illegally for the committing of an offense, of forcing a contract, or of using threats.

Related terms

  • endure

Translations

Verb

duress (third-person singular simple present duresses, present participle duressing, simple past and past participle duressed)

  1. To put under duress; to pressure.
    Someone was duressing her.
    The small nation was duressed into giving up territory.

Anagrams

  • Druses, Suders, druses, sudser

duress From the web:

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