FORCE vs IMPOSE: NOUN
- Moral strength.
- A capacity for affecting the mind or behavior; efficacy.
- One that possesses such capacity.
- A body of persons or other resources organized or available for a certain purpose.
- A person or group capable of influential action.
- Military strength.
- A unit of a nation's military personnel, especially one deployed into combat.
- A vector quantity that tends to produce an acceleration of a body in the direction of its application. Newton's second law of motion states that a free body accelerates in the direction of the applied force and that its acceleration is directly proportional to the force and inversely proportional to its mass.
- A force play.
- The use of physical power or violence to compel or restrain.
- Power made operative against resistance; exertion.
- The capacity to do work or cause physical change; energy, strength, or active power.
- A unit that is part of some military service
- One possessing or exercising power or influence or authority
- (of a law) having legal validity
- An act of aggression (as one against a person who resists)
- (physics) the influence that produces a change in a physical quantity
- Group of people willing to obey orders
- A group of people having the power of effective action
- Physical energy or intensity
- Intellectual power or vigor, especially as conveyed in writing or speech.
- A powerful effect or influence
- A waterfall.
- A command; injunction.
- Command; injunction.
FORCE vs IMPOSE: VERB
- Do forcibly; exert force
- Impose or thrust urgently, importunately, or inexorably
- Force into or from an action or state, either physically or metaphorically
- Take by force
- Urge or force (a person) to an action; constrain or motivate
- Move with force, He pushed the table into a corner movewithforcehepushedthetablei
- Cause to move along the ground by pulling
- Squeeze like a wedge into a tight space
- To cause to do through pressure or necessity, by physical, moral or intellectual means :She forced him to take a job in the city tocausetodothroughpressureorne
- To be an inconvenience
- To establish or apply by authority.
- Impose something unpleasant
- Compel to behave in a certain way
- Impose and collect
- To enforce: compel to behave in a certain way
FORCE vs IMPOSE: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- N/A
- To establish or apply as compulsory; levy.
- To bring about by authority or force; force to prevail.
- To obtrude or force (oneself, for example) on another or others.
- To arrange (type or plates) on an imposing stone.
- To force oneself on or take unfair advantage of others.
- To practice tricks or deception.
- To take unfair advantage of (a person, a friendship).
- To offer or circulate fraudulently; pass off.
FORCE vs IMPOSE: TRANSITIVE VERB
- To cause an opponent to play (a particular card).
- To allow (a run) to be scored by walking a batter when the bases are loaded.
- To put (a runner) out on a force play.
- To cause to grow or mature by artificially accelerating normal processes.
- To induce change in (a complex system) by changing one of its parameters.
- To rape.
- To break down or open by force.
- To move, open, or clear by force.
- To compel through pressure or necessity.
- To gain by the use of force or coercion.
- To move or effect against resistance or inertia.
- To inflict or impose relentlessly.
- To put undue strain on.
- To increase or accelerate (a pace, for example) to the maximum.
- To produce with effort and against one's will.
- To use (language) with obvious lack of ease and naturalness.
- To lay on; to set or place; to put; to deposit.
- To lay as a charge, burden, tax, duty, obligation, command, penalty, etc.; to enjoin; to levy; to inflict.
- To lay on, as the hands, in the religious rites of confirmation and ordination.
- To arrange in proper order on a table of stone or metal and lock up in a chase for printing; -- said of columns or pages of type, forms, etc.
FORCE vs IMPOSE: OTHER WORD TYPES
- Exert force
- Do forcibly
- Cause to move by pulling
- To clip or shear, as the beard or wool. In particular
- Move with force, "He pushed the table into a corner"
- Constrain or motivate
- Urge or force (a person) to an action
- A putout of a base runner who is required to run; the putout is accomplished by holding the ball while touching the base to which the runner must advance before the runner reaches that base
- Move with force
- To cause to do through pressure or necessity, by physical, moral or intellectual means
- To overcome or overthrow by force; accomplish one's purpose upon or in regard to by force or compulsion; compel to succumb, give way, or yield.
- To act effectively upon by force, physical, mental, or moral, in any manner; impel by force; compel; constrain.
- To stuff; farce.
- To clip off the upper and more hairy part of (wool), for export: a practice forbidden by stat.
- (idiom) (force (oneself) on/upon) To rape.
- (idiom) (force (someone's) hand) To force to act or speak prematurely or unwillingly.
- (idiom) (in force) In full strength; in large numbers.
- (idiom) (in force) In effect; operative.
- To lay on, or set on; put, place, or deposit: as, to impose, the hands in ordination or confirmation.
- To lay as a burden, or something to be borne or endured; levy, inflict, or enforce, as by authority, power, or influence: as, to impose taxes or penalties; to impose one's opinions upon others.
- To obtrude fallaciously or deceitfully; palm off; pass off.
- To fix upon; impute.
- To subject by way of punishment.
- In printing, to lay upon an imposing-stone or the bed of a press and secure in a chase, as pages of type or stereotype plates.
- To lay or place a burden or restraint; act with constraining effect: with upon: as, to impose upon one's patience or hospitality.
- To practise misleading trickery or imposture; act with a delusive effect: with upon: as, to impose upon one with false pretenses.
FORCE vs IMPOSE: RELATED WORDS
- Drive, Wedge, Forcefulness, Ram, Pull, Pull, Pressure, Thrust, Effect, Strength, Power, Push, Push, Personnel, Coerce
- Introduce, Uphold, Apply, Exert, Implement, Punish, Foist, Enact, Imposition, Reimpose, Bring down, Visit, Levy, Inflict, Enforce
FORCE vs IMPOSE: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Squeeze, Violence, Drive, Wedge, Forcefulness, Ram, Pull, Pull, Pressure, Thrust, Effect, Strength, Push, Push, Personnel
- Dictate, Sanction, Declare, Establish, Introduce, Uphold, Apply, Implement, Punish, Foist, Enact, Bring down, Visit, Levy, Enforce
FORCE vs IMPOSE: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- The official podcast of Air Force Space Command heads West to Vandenberg Air Force Base, California!
- Space Force or an officer who has been appointed and scrolled into the Space Force.
- Defence Force magistrates in respect of service offences by Australian Defence Force personnel.
- Upon graduation, you will be commissioned as a second lieutenant on active duty Air Force or Space Force.
- Violent crimes are defined in the UCR Program as those offenses that involve force or threat of force.
- Summation of force can involve either sequential summation of force or simultaneous summation of force.
- Let us turn now to consider what force it was that conquered physical force.
- Entry into force Publication of treaty, once Treaties and Unbound pamphlet; in force.
- Roy was assigned to an Air Force Special Operations Force Helicopter Gunship.
- During our review of force incidents, we saw many examples of force, including deadly force, being used against individuals in crisis.
- No county asked voters to impose the tax.
- Court should not impose identical discipline in Massachusetts.
- Therefore, the rule does not impose this requirement.
- Commercial fungicides are expensive and impose health risks.
- Sometimes banks impose a monthly debit card fee.
- However, individual investors can impose additional eligibility requirements.
- Although some states authorize local government limits or impose limits only in select geographic areas, most impose statewide, uniform assessment limits.
- DBMS may impose limitations while another may impose none.
- Though hiring goals may burden some innocent individuals, they simply do not impose the same kind of injury that layoffs impose.
- Canadian municipalities may impose business license fees but do not impose income taxes.
FORCE vs IMPOSE: QUESTIONS
- Are the Swap Force abilities exclusive to Swap Force characters?
- What is the force that can counteract the inertial force?
- How do you find restoring force from displacement and restoring force?
- Why is the support force on an object called the normal force?
- What is the force of force between Proton and electron?
- What are the benefits of Infinity force over Trinity force?
- Is the Japan Self Defense Force a real military force?
- Why is centripetal force called a fictitious force?
- Can Action Force and reaction force cancel each other?
- Is friction a balanced force or an unbalanced force?
- Do SBA regulations impose unnecessary burdens or costs?
- Should states impose sales taxes on Internet access?
- Can RBI impose monetary penalties on compound contraventions?
- Should adjudicators impose censures under individual sanction guidelines?
- Which GCC countries do not impose withholding taxes?
- Which countries impose financial sanctions on the UK?
- When did Canada impose retaliatory tariffs on China?
- Do Christians impose ethnocentric ideas on cultures?
- Should Singapore impose restrictions on foreign investors?
- Do gorillas impose hard boundaries like chimpanzees?