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Mandatory vs Duress - What's the difference?

mandatory | duress |

As nouns the difference between mandatory and duress

is that mandatory is (dated|rare) a person, organisation or state who receives a mandate; a mandatary while duress is (obsolete) harsh treatment.

As an adjective mandatory

is obligatory; required or commanded by authority.

As a verb duress is

to put under ; to pressure.

mandatory

English

Adjective

(en adjective)
  • Obligatory; required or commanded by authority.
  • Attendance at a school is usually mandatory .
  • * 1999 , Ian Stewart, Jack Cohen, Figments of Reality: The Evolution of the Curious Mind , page 276
  • This kind of immediate control structure we take to be characteristic of the tribe, and it leads to a rather rigid type of system in which 'every action not mandatory is forbidden'.
  • Of, being or relating to a mandate.
  • Mandatory Palestine

    Synonyms

    * compulsory * obligatory

    Antonyms

    * (obligatory) optional * (obligatory) elective

    Derived terms

    * mandatoriness

    Noun

    (mandatories)
  • (dated, rare) A person, organisation or state who receives a mandate; a mandatary.
  • Anagrams

    *

    duress

    English

    Noun

    (-)
  • (obsolete) Harsh treatment.
  • * Burke
  • The agreements made with the landlords during the time of slavery, are only the effect of duress and force.
  • Constraint by threat.
  • (legal) The state of compulsion or necessity in which a person is influenced, whether by the unlawful restraint of his liberty or by actual or threatened physical violence, to incur a civil liability or to commit an offence.
  • Verb

    (es)
  • To put under ; to pressure.
  • Someone was duressing her.
    The small nation was duressed into giving up territory.

    Anagrams

    *