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    hos·tage
    /ˈhästij/

    noun

    • 1. a person seized or held as security for the fulfillment of a condition: "three hostages were released but only after their families paid an estimated $200,000 to the guerrillas"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. someone who is made a prisoner in order to force other people to do something: Inmates at the jail held 12 hostages and demanded to meet the governor. (Definition of hostage from the Cambridge Academic Content Dictionary © Cambridge University Press) Examples of hostage.

  3. The meaning of HOSTAGE is a person held by one party in a conflict as a pledge pending the fulfillment of an agreement. How to use hostage in a sentence.

  4. A hostage is someone who has been captured by a person or organization and who may be killed or injured if people do not do what that person or organization demands. It is hopeful that two hostages will be freed in the next few days.

  5. HOSTAGE meaning: 1. someone who is taken as a prisoner by an enemy in order to force the other people involved to do…. Learn more.

  6. a person given to or held by a person, organization, etc, as a security or pledge or for ransom, release, exchange for prisoners, etc. the state of being held as a hostage. any security or pledge. give hostages to fortune.

  7. A hostage is a prisoner taken by kidnappers and held until the kidnappers get whatever they’re asking for. If you refuse to empty the litter box, your roommate might take your cat as a hostage until you clean it.

  8. a person who is captured and held prisoner by a person or group, and who may be injured or killed if people do not do what the person or group is asking. Three children were taken hostage during the bank robbery. He was held hostage for almost a year.

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