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1 compulsion
[kəm'pʌlʃn]1) (urge) impulso m.2) (force) costrizione f., coercizione f.* * *(compelling or being compelled: You are under no compulsion to go.) costrizione- compulsorily* * *compulsion /kəmˈpʌlʃn/n.3 (psic.) coazione; compulsione; pulsione.* * *[kəm'pʌlʃn]1) (urge) impulso m.2) (force) costrizione f., coercizione f. -
2 compulsion com·pul·sion n
[kəm'pʌlʃ(ə)n]1) costrizione f, pressione funder compulsion — sotto costrizione, dietro or sotto pressione
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3 constraint
[kən'streɪnt]nome form.1) (compulsion) costrizione f., coercizione f.2) (uneasiness) imbarazzo m.* * *[kən'streɪnt]nome form.1) (compulsion) costrizione f., coercizione f.2) (uneasiness) imbarazzo m. -
4 pressure ***** pres·sure
['prɛʃə(r)]1. n1) Phys Tech Met pressione f2) (compulsion, influence) pressione f, pressioni fplhe's under pressure from his wife to give up smoking — sua moglie fa pressione perché lui smetta di fumare
they are really putting the pressure on — ci (or vi etc) stanno assillando
2. vtSee:pressurize 2) -
5 pressure
I ['preʃə(r)]1) pressione f. (anche tecn. meteor.)2) fig. (on person) pressione f.to put pressure on sb. — fare pressione su qcn.
to do sth. under pressure — fare qcs. sotto costrizione
3) (volume) (of traffic, tourists, visitors) flusso m.II ['preʃə(r)]* * *['preʃə]1) ((the amount of force exerted by) the action of pressing: to apply pressure to a cut to stop bleeding; A barometer measures atmospheric pressure.) pressione2) ((a) strain or stress: The pressures of her work are sometimes too much for her.) pressione3) (strong persuasion; compulsion or force: He agreed under pressure.) pressione•- pressurise
- pressure cooker* * *I ['preʃə(r)]1) pressione f. (anche tecn. meteor.)2) fig. (on person) pressione f.to put pressure on sb. — fare pressione su qcn.
to do sth. under pressure — fare qcs. sotto costrizione
3) (volume) (of traffic, tourists, visitors) flusso m.II ['preʃə(r)] -
6 obligation ob·li·ga·tion n
[ˌɒblɪ'ɡeɪʃ(ə)n](duty) obbligo, (compulsion) impegno"without obligation" — "senza impegno"
to be under an obligation to sb/to do sth — essere in dovere verso qn/di fare qc
См. также в других словарях:
under compulsion — index bound Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
Under Compulsion — Infobox Book name = Under Compulsion title orig = translator = image caption = Dust jacket from the first edition. author = Thomas M. Disch illustrator = cover artist = Ken Reilly country = United Kingdom language = English series = genre =… … Wikipedia
under compulsion — by force, under pressure … English contemporary dictionary
under protest — adv. Unwillingly; done under compulsion while making one’s unwillingness known; used to describe an action done unwillingly and with objection. The Essential Law Dictionary. Sphinx Publishing, An imprint of Sourcebooks, Inc. Amy Hackney Blackwell … Law dictionary
compulsion — n. 1) to feel a compulsion 2) (a) moral compulsion 3) a compulsion to + inf. (he felt no compulsion to do it) 4) under compulsion (to give in under compulsion) * * * [kəm pʌlʃ(ə)n] (a) moral compulsion to feel a compulsion a compulsion to + inf.… … Combinatory dictionary
compulsion — noun ADJECTIVE ▪ strange ▪ inner … OF COMPULSION ▪ element (BrE) ▪ There is an element of compulsion in the new plan for the unemployed. V … Collocations dictionary
compulsion — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) Coercion Nouns compulsion, coercion, coaction, constraint, duress, obligation; enforcement, pressure; [physical, brute, or main] force; the sword, martial law, strong arm [of the law]; draft,… … English dictionary for students
compulsion — UK [kəmˈpʌlʃ(ə)n] / US noun Word forms compulsion : singular compulsion plural compulsions 1) [countable] a very strong feeling of wanting to do something, especially a feeling that you cannot control He felt a sudden compulsion to tell her the… … English dictionary
compulsion — com|pul|sion [ kəm pʌlʃən ] noun 1. ) count a very strong feeling of wanting to do something, especially a feeling that you cannot control: He felt a sudden compulsion to tell her the truth. 2. ) uncount a legal or other obligation to do… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
compulsion — n. 1 a constraint; an obligation. 2 Psychol. an irresistible urge to a form of behaviour, esp. against one s conscious wishes. Phrases and idioms: under compulsion because one is compelled. Etymology: ME f. F f. LL compulsio onis (as compel) … Useful english dictionary
under protest — A payment made or an act done under compulsion while the payor or actor asserts that he waives no rights by making the payment or by doing the act. U.C.C. No. 1 207. See protest … Black's law dictionary