¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Coercers
1. coercer [n] - See also: coercer
Lexicographical Neighbors of Coercers
Literary usage of Coercers
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Economic Synthesis: A Study of the Laws of Income by Achille Loria (1914)
"... the coercion is effected altogether regardless of the interest of the labourers
who are coerced, and in the egoistic interest of the coercers. ..."
2. The Legitimacy of International Organizations by Jean-Marc Coicaud (2001)
"But if growth stops, the coercers may come back into power, and the evolution of
technology may lead to their mutual neutralization or, on the contrary, ..."
3. North America by Anthony Trollope (1862)
"... quently the coercers of opinion. Seeing this, I claim for England a broader
freedom in political matters than the States have as yet achieved. ..."
4. The Monthly Review by Ralph Griffiths (1811)
"The desire of comparing and discriminating the two conquerors of Italy, and
coercers of the Popes, keeps alive a minute attention. ..."
5. The Nineteenth Century (1889)
"It is only the coercers of Ireland who are coerced, and with good effect. In 1886,
as the Home Secretary has recently pointed out—that is in the year before ..."
6. Retrospections of America, 1797-1811 by John Bernard, Laurence Hutton, Brander Matthews (1886)
"A panic seized the baffled coercers lest this example should prove infectious.
It became necessary to show the incompatibility of American institutions with ..."