প্রবল, জবরদস্ত, সতেজ, ফলপ্রদ, শক্তিমান্, বল দ্বারা কৃত
(1) Impelled by physical force especially against resistance.
(2) Powerful.
(3) Aggressive.
(1) The Army should maintain a vertical assault capability for forcible entry operations.
(2) Both deportation and forcible transfer relate to involuntary and unlawful evacuation of individuals from the territory in which they reside.
(3) No u251cu00f6u251cu00e7u251cu2510consentu251cu00f6u251cu00e7u251cu00fb can deprive a parent of his or her natural guardianship rights and obligations, either, especially if they were coerced through threats of forcible removal.
(4) Future airlifters will likely retain this requirement since it is an essential element of the Army's forcible entry mission.
(5) Alaska generally, and Anchorage specifically, have been plagued by a high incidence of forcible rapes and sexual assaults.
(6) Finally, it may be justifiable to allow forcible entry to premises for the purposes of inspection.
(7) A lawyer pointed out that there was no sign of forcible entry into the camp.
(8) Home invasion is the forcible entry of an occupied home by presumably violent and usually armed criminals.
(9) She took her case to the king's court and sued for forcible abduction and imprisonment, demanding u00d4u00f6u00bcu251cu2551100 in damages, which the court, in turn, awarded.
(10) This would include both lethal attacks on soldiers of those nations or members of those military organizations, and, once the members surrender or are disarmed, their continued forcible detention.
(11) This regulation could well mean forcible conscription into the armed forces.
(12) Secondly, there is the fact that some force was used but that force was within the range of force that can be inherent in the case of forcible rape.
(13) But non-government organizations decried the forcible evictions as inhumane, urging the government to build replacements for their demolished houses.
(14) Democracy is obviously more desirable than a dictatorship, but that does not justify any forcible change by an external power.
(15) In his strongest and most forcible performance from the podium, Mr Sargent succeeded in putting across two key messages.
(16) It is a stronger power, a more forcible motive, which exerts itself upon such occasions.
(17) Such an offer must be made at fair market value before a forcible seizure can be sought through the courts.
(18) Someone or something has made a forcible entry.
(19) Arguments must therefore be crude, clear and forcible , and appeal to emotions and instincts, not the intellect.
(20) In burglary, the loss is discovered after the fact, and there is evidence of forcible entry.
forced
violent
Nonaggressive
Weak