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coercive force Meaning in Bengali



 নিগ্রহ বল,




coercive force's Usage Examples:

Coercivity, also called the magnetic coercivity, coercive field or coercive force, is a measure of the ability of a ferromagnetic material to withstand.


based on maximum energy product in megagauss-oersteds and intrinsic coercive force as kilooersteds, as well as an IEC classification system.


It measures residual flux density BR and coercive force HC.


with the study of warfare, and the theory and application of organized coercive force.


the experienced professional deal with the attack than submit to the coercive force.


invention it was one of the highest coercive force permanent magnets available, at 3000 oersteds.


Israel's practices and policies by means of using economic weapons as the coercive force.


of argumentative speech, which Habermas identifies as the absence of coercive force, Communicative rationality is distinct from instrumental, normative.


SmCo5 magnets have a very high coercivity (coercive force); that is, they are not easily demagnetized.


victimized and coerced by such individuals legitimizes their use of coercive force to eliminate such threats.


saw material culture as one of the social facts that functions as a coercive force to maintain solidarity in a society.


vagueness, very stimulating and touching at times, but as deficient in coercive force of matter as it is in lasting precision and elegance of form.


"Dependence of the coercive force on the density of some iron oxide powders".


In Lofaso’s view, although government is typically the most coercive force in most people’s lives, the accumulation of private power is a close.


decisions, not through the operation of economic laws acting with the same coercive force as laws of nature.


abstract ideal regulating the conditions under which governments may use coercive force over their subjects.


is subject to varying circumstances, such as a government's limited coercive force, a lack of organized state, or the presence of strong religious precept.


context of Christian anti-Judaism and the imperial church’s exercise of coercive force against religious minorities.


towards the Irish, who steadfastly remained Roman Catholic in spite of coercive force by Edward VI and subsequent rulers to convert them to Protestantism.



Synonyms:

turn up the pressure; act; pressure; steamroller; terrorise; drive; compel; obligate; sandbag; move; coerce; bring oneself; bludgeon; hale; dragoon; oblige; squeeze; railroad; terrorize; turn up the heat; squeeze for; steamroll;

Antonyms:

refrain; ride; linger; precede; descend;

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