To free the mind and the heart from compulsory religious confession and observance was good for all three interested parties: the state, the church and the people.—Jon Meacham, Newsweek, 27 Jan. 2009So he wants a private life and no photographs and nobody to know his home address. I can dig it, I can relate to that (but, like he should try it when it's compulsory instead of a free-choice option).—Salman Rushdie, New York Times Book Review, 14 Jan. 1990He began to resent the compulsory attendance at the boring factory meetings.—James Reston, Jr., Time, 28 Nov. 1988compulsory retirement at age 70
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Volkswagen agreed a deal with unions in late 2024 to avoid factory closures in Germany and rule out compulsory redundancies until the end of 2030.—
Sam Meredith,
CNBC,
26 June 2026 Zverev had given his window for that day and so was put out by being told that the test, outside of that window, was compulsory.—
Charlie Eccleshare,
New York Times,
24 June 2026 Since Israel’s founding, members of the community who devoted themselves to Torah studies have been exempt from the nation’s compulsory military service.—
Timothy Nerozzi,
The Washington Examiner,
23 June 2026 Simply sitting with the idea that death is compulsory and irreversible is too hard.—
Amanda Petrusich,
New Yorker,
22 June 2026 See All Example Sentences for compulsory
Word History
Etymology
borrowed from Anglo-French & Medieval Latin; Anglo-French compulsorie "compelling, coercive," borrowed from Medieval Latin compulsōrius, derivative, with -tōrius, deverbal adjective suffix (originally forming derivatives from agent nouns ending in -tōr-, -tor) of Latin compellere "to drive together, force to go, force (to a view, course of action)" (with -s- from past participle compulsus) — more at compel
specifically: required to be brought or asserted in a pleading because of having arisen from the transaction or occurrence that is the subject of litigation