four types of legal abuses as mentioned here.
However, these types were further clarified in Bhartiben Bipinbhai Tamboli v. State of Gujrat. Held that:
Physical Abuse: Using physical force against a woman in such a way that she suffers bodily harm or injury. Physical abuse, criminal intimidation (threat to cause harm) and criminal force (using violence against a person to harm him) by beating, kicking, punching, leaving an injured person in a dangerous place, using weapons to threaten, forcing to leave. your marriage, hurting your children, using physical force in sexual situations, etc.
Sexual abuse: This is a form of physical force that involves forcing a woman to perform an unwanted, dangerous or degrading sexual act. This includes calling a woman sexual names, hurting her with objects and weapons during sex, and forcing her to have sex, even by her husband or an intimate partner with whom she has consensual sex.
Emotional Abuse: Not all abusive relationships involve violence and physical harm. Many women face emotional abuse that is just as devastating. This includes verbal abuse such as shouting, name-calling, blaming, isolating, threatening, controlling, insulting or constant criticism.
Emotional abuse refers to attempts to intimidate, control or isolate you. This type of violence does not include physical violence, although it may include threats of violence against you or your loved ones. It is characterized by a person's words, actions and the consistency of their behaviors. Abuse may start gradually, but it happens again and again.
People of any age or gender can abuse or experience abuse. And abuse doesn't just happen in romantic relationships. The person abusing you could be your spouse or romantic partner - but they could also be your business partner, parent, guardian or even your grown child.
Regardless, you don't deserve to be mistreated, and it's certainly not your fault.
Keep reading to learn the signs of emotional abuse and get tips on what to do next.
Financial Abuse: Financial abuse mainly means that the woman does not get enough money from her partner to support herself and the children by buying clothes, food, medicine, etc. This includes a woman's refusal to take up employment. In addition, this category also includes forcing him out of the house in which he lives rather than renting, depriving him of any financial means to which he has a right according to any custom or law, and limiting his access to the common economy. It also includes the transfer or disposal of movable or immovable property, assets, shares, securities and other property in which he is interested.