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    im·pris·on
    /imˈprizən/

    verb

    • 1. put or keep in prison or a place like a prison: "he was imprisoned for six months for contempt of court"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. The meaning of IMPRISON is to put in or as if in prison : confine. How to use imprison in a sentence.

  3. to put someone in prison: be imprisoned for He was imprisoned in 1965 for attempted murder. figurative Unable to go out because of the deep snow, she felt imprisoned in her own house. Synonym. jail. SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases. Putting people in prison. at His/Her Majesty's pleasure idiom. bang someone up. bar. behind bars idiom.

  4. Imprison definition: to confine in or as if in a prison.. See examples of IMPRISON used in a sentence.

  5. To imprison is to hold someone in a prison or jail. It can also mean to confine them elsewhere. You might imprison a classmate in a locker, for example. Cops imprison suspects who can't make bail, and someone could be imprisoned for a long time if convicted of a serious crime.

  6. Define imprison. imprison synonyms, imprison pronunciation, imprison translation, English dictionary definition of imprison. tr.v. im·pris·oned , im·pris·on·ing , im·pris·ons To put in or as if in prison; confine. im·pris′on·a·ble adj. im·pris′on·ment n.

  7. verb. If someone is imprisoned, they are locked up or kept somewhere, usually in prison as a punishment for a crime or for political opposition. The local priest was imprisoned for 18 months on charges of anti-state agitation. [be VERB -ed] Dutch colonial authorities imprisoned him for his part in the independence movement. [VERB noun]

  8. /ɪmˈprɪzn/ [often passive] Verb Forms. to put somebody in a prison or another place from which they cannot escape synonym jail. be imprisoned (for something) They were imprisoned for possession of drugs. be imprisoned (+ adv./prep.) (figurative) Some young mothers feel imprisoned in their own homes. Collocations Criminal justice. Extra Examples.

  9. Jun 2, 2024 · The term to imprison implies a sentencing has taken place when used to describe actions taken by a legal system, whereas to jail may imply a temporary holding before a trial, conviction, and sentencing.

  10. How to use . imprison in a sentenceElsewhere, she tells her inamorata, “It does not matter if you elude my arms/my dear, when thought alone can imprison you.”

  11. Britannica Dictionary definition of IMPRISON. + object. :to put (someone) in prison. He was imprisoned for murder. He has threatened to imprison his political opponents. — sometimes used figuratively. He has a brilliant mind imprisoned in an unhealthy body.

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