The participles compelling and compelled are used as adjectives (the first more often than the second). There is also an adjective related to the noun compulsion, which is compulsory.
i always am compel to do my homework , and i always get sleepy when I'm doing my work
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The above answer is grammatically incorrect. "I always am compelled to do my homework, and I always get sleepy when I'm doing my work." That can still be improved, but at least now it's correct.
I felt compelled to join the softball team knowing my father was the coach.
my cousin compel me to do herhomework everyday
John felt compelled to reach out and touch the live wire.
He felt compelled to go visit an old friend he had not seen for sometime.
Jane was compelled to tell the truth even though it would cause her to lose her job.
"The courts cannot compel you to give evidence against yourself." "What could compel a man to deliberately drive off a cliff?"
The abstract noun form of the verb to compel is the gerund, compelling. A related abstract noun is compulsion.
delay, hinder, impede.
compel
Urge, coerce, enforce, oblige, necessitate...
You can't compel me to answer this question.
I will compel him to tell the truth.I wish I could compel my cat to come when I call.
His sister compelled him to go to a Justin Bieber concert, but after the concert he became a Belieber <3
The evidence presented in court was compelling enough to compel the jury to reach a verdict in favor of the defendant.
The noun form of compel is compulsion.
compel
"The courts cannot compel you to give evidence against yourself." "What could compel a man to deliberately drive off a cliff?"
Her impassioned speech compels the audience to take action.
The meaning of "compel" in Tagalog is "pilitin" or "pumilit." It refers to forcing someone to do something against their will or to make them feel obligated to do something.
Very hard to answer this question without knowing what the motion to compel was requiring of you.
The similar meaning to compel is to coerce or to force someone to do something against their will.
of Compel