It's the word of the day for October 9th.
Today's word is duress, spelled D-U-R-E-S-S.
Duress is a noun.
It typically is used with under as in under duress,
and refers to force or threats meant to make someone do something.
It's used especially of unlawful coercion.
Here's the word used in a sentence from Lithub.com.
Did you know that Toni Morrison also edited poetry?
What couldn't she do?
Despite inexperience with the medium, Morrison was an early champion of the poet June Jordan.
She published one of her earliest collections, Things I Do in the Dark, in 1977.
In a 1975 letter,
Morrison told Jordan that Random House would publish her work but only under duress.
The answer they gave was, we would prefer her prose, we'll do poetry if we must, she wrote.
Now I would tell them to shove it if that were me.
Duress is most often paired with the word under,
to refer to force or threats meant to make someone do something.
For example, someone forced to sign a document, signs it under duress,
and a person held under duress is not free to leave but is being constrained, usually unlawfully.
Do not confuse being under duress with being under stress, which is a much more common occurrence.