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  1. Oct 23, 2016 · Duress is a compulsion, coercion, or pressure to do something. In a legal sense, this refers to forcing someone to do something, or to sign a contract, by threatening his personal safety, his reputation, or other personal issue. When someone agrees to do something only because he is being threatened – or under duress – the law is likely to ...

  2. Synonyms for DURESS: pressure, constraint, compulsion, intimidation, coercion, violence, threat, fear; Antonyms of DURESS: agreement, consent, approval, permission ...

  3. Stress is far more common; it's about strain or pressure. Duress is a more technical term that refers to wrongful or unlawful coercion. If you are forced to sign a contract under threat, for example, you have signed the contract "under duress." Not many people wind up "under duress," but being "under stress" is a common life occurrence.

  4. Goode, 308 S.W.3d 409, the court defined duress as “unlawful conduct or a threat of unlawful conduct of such a character as to destroy the other party's exercise of free will and judgment…the threat must be imminent and the party must have no present means of protection.”. A similar definition was laid down by the court in the case of ...

  5. DURESS meaning: If you do something under duress, you do it because someone is forcing you to: . Learn more.

  6. The meaning of DURESS is forcible restraint or restriction. How to use duress in a sentence. Duress: Its Origin and Relations

  7. duress in American English. (duˈres, dju-, ˈdurɪs, ˈdjur-) noun. 1. compulsion by threat or force; coercion; constraint. 2. Law. such constraint or coercion as will render void a contract or other legal act entered or performed under its influence. 3.