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单词 prison
释义

prisonn.

Brit. /ˈprɪzn/, U.S. /ˈprɪzn/
Forms:

α. Old English–Middle English prisun, Middle English prisonne, Middle English prisoune, Middle English prisown, Middle English prisund, Middle English prisune, Middle English prysoune, Middle English prysun, Middle English prysyn, Middle English–1500s prisen, Middle English–1500s prisone, Middle English–1500s prisoun, Middle English–1500s prysone, Middle English–1500s prysoun, Middle English–1500s prysown, Middle English–1600s pryson, Middle English– prison, 1500s prysonne, 1800s– pruson (English regional (Yorkshire)); Scottish pre-1700 prision, pre-1700 prisone, pre-1700 prisoun, pre-1700 prisoune, pre-1700 prisown, pre-1700 prission, pre-1700 prissone, pre-1700 prissonies (plural), pre-1700 prissoun, pre-1700 prissoune, pre-1700 prwsoun, pre-1700 prysone, pre-1700 prysoune, pre-1700 prysown, pre-1700 pryssoun, pre-1700 pryssune, pre-1700 1700s– prison, 1800s prizen.

β. Middle English preason, Middle English preison, Middle English presonne, Middle English presoun, Middle English presoune, Middle English presown, Middle English presowun, Middle English presoyn, Middle English presun, Middle English presune, Middle English preysoun, Middle English–1500s preson, Middle English–1500s presone, 1500s presen, 1500s pressun; Scottish pre-1700 preason, pre-1700 preasone, pre-1700 preasoun, pre-1700 preassoun, pre-1700 preisone, pre-1700 preisoun, pre-1700 preissone, pre-1700 preissonne, pre-1700 preissoun, pre-1700 presen, pre-1700 preson, pre-1700 presone, pre-1700 presonn, pre-1700 presonne, pre-1700 presoun, pre-1700 presoune, pre-1700 presown, pre-1700 presowne, pre-1700 presson, pre-1700 pressone, pre-1700 pressoun, pre-1700 pressoyn, pre-1700 preysone, pre-1700 prieson, 1700s presin.

Origin: A borrowing from French. Etymons: French prisoun, prison.
Etymology: < Anglo-Norman prisoun, preson, presoun, presun, pressun, prisone, prisonne, prisoune, prisune, presone, Anglo-Norman and Old French prisun, prison (Middle French, French prison ) action of taking prisoner (c1100), imprisonment, captivity (c1140), prisoner, captive, detainee (c1140), place of detention (c1210) < classical Latin prensiōn- , prensiō action or power of making an arrest (see prension n.). Compare post-classical Latin prisio captivity, place of captivity (late 12th cent.), seizure, imprisonment (1281, 1313 in British sources), prisona place of captivity (frequently 1200–1483 in British sources; also occasionally as priso), priso prisoner (frequently from 12th cent. in British and continental sources), prisonus, prisona (feminine) prisoner (from 13th cent. in British sources). Compare Old Occitan preisos, Italian prigione (beginning of the 13th cent. as prescione; < French), Spanish prision (c1129), Portuguese prisão (1130).The sense ‘prisoner’ (which occurs in Italian and Spanish as well as in French, English, and Latin) appears to have arisen from a person taken (in war) and held as a captive, being considered as a capture (compare senses of Old French prise at prise n.2, and also prize n.1). With sense 1d compare French prison (1854 or earlier in this sense: compare quot. 1867 at sense 1d).
1.
a. Without article, frequently preceded by a preposition, as to prison, in prison. Originally: the condition of being kept in captivity or confinement; forcible deprivation of personal liberty; imprisonment. Hence (now the usual sense): a place of incarceration (see sense 1b). to break prison: to escape from prison.
ΘΚΠ
society > authority > punishment > imprisonment > [noun]
prisonOE
wardc1290
prisoning1344
keepingc1384
imprisonment1389
prisonment1422
jail1447
fasteningc1460
warding1497
firmancea1522
incarcerationc1540
imprisoningc1542
limbo1590
limbus?a1600
endurance1610
jailing1622
restraint1829
carceration1870
holiday1901
Paddy Doyle1919
bird1924
society > authority > subjection > restraint or restraining > restraint depriving of liberty > confinement > [noun]
prisonOE
bonda1225
beclosing?c1225
narrowth?c1225
holdc1330
banda1400
festinance1426
duressc1430
enclosingc1440
closeness1530
durancea1535
closure1592
reclusedness1613
confinement1646
immurement1736
immuration1895
hack1899
prisonment1900
lockdown1973
OE Anglo-Saxon Chron. (Tiber. B.iv) anno 1076 Se kyngc syððan com to Englalande & gefeng Rogcer eorl his mæg, & sette on prisun.
lOE Anglo-Saxon Chron. (Laud) anno 1112 Rotbert de Bælesme he let niman & on prisune don.
?a1160 Anglo-Saxon Chron. (Laud) (Peterborough contin.) anno 1137 Þa namen hi þa men..& diden heom in prisun.
a1300 Passion our Lord 145 in R. Morris Old Eng. Misc. (1872) 41 (MED) Þeyh ich to þe deþe schulle myd þe go Oþer in-to prysune..Ic nele neuer þe vorsake.
a1325 (c1250) Gen. & Exod. (1968) l. 2070 Ðu salt ben ut of prisun numen.
a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Vesp.) 9556 (MED) Til his aun fa felun Was he be-taght for to prisun [v.rr. presoun, preson, prisoun].
?a1425 Mandeville's Trav. (Egerton) (1889) 40 A place whare oure Lord was done in prisoun.
1448 J. Northwood in Paston Lett. & Papers (2005) III. 59 Sum ben in pryson in the jayll at Couentre.
a1464 J. Capgrave Abbreuiacion of Cron. (Cambr. Gg.4.12) (1983) 124 Ther þe kyng tok þe principalis of London and sette hem in prison at Wyndesore.
a1500 (?a1410) J. Lydgate Churl & Bird (Lansd.) 99 in Minor Poems (1934) ii. 472 (MED) Song & prisoun haue noon accordaunce; Trowistow I wole syngen in prisoun?
c1503 R. Arnold Chron. f. Civ Yf ony thing in this lettre be vntrue I am contente that your grace giue vnto me therfore perpetuell prison.
1535 Bible (Coverdale) Psalms cxlv[i]. 7 The Lorde lowseth men out of preson.
1581 J. Marbeck Bk. Notes & Common Places 665 The King caused him to be clapt in prison, but he brake prison.
1607 B. Jonson Volpone v. xii. sig. O Thou art to lie in prison, crampt with irons, Till thou bee'st sick, and lame indeed. View more context for this quotation
1621 Execution at Prague in Harl. Misc. (Malh.) III. 411 Remain in perpetual prison.
1662 C. Culpeper in Extracts State Papers (Friends' Hist. Soc.) (1911) 2nd Ser. 152 (note) I haue some Quakers..in prison which I doe intend to let goe upon taking the Oath.
1700 J. Dryden Chaucer's Palamon & Arcite i, in Fables 17 While I Must languish in Despair, in Prison die.
a1715 Bp. G. Burnet Hist. Own Time (1724) I. 381 Sir Harbottle's father..lay long in prison, because he would not pay the loan-money.
1749 J. Cleland Mem. Woman of Pleasure I. 150 It would go to the very heart of her to send such a tender young creature to prison.
1779 T. Digges Let. 15 Nov. in B. Franklin Papers (1995) XXXI. 98 I fear another squad may be induced to break Prison... These breaking outs, are not only disagreeable, but at times highly distressing.
1817 W. Selwyn Abridgem. Law Nisi Prius (ed. 4) II. 860 If a man be imprisoned..on the 1st day of January, and kept in prison till the 1st day of February..the whole is one entire trespass.
1850 J. Wilson Ann. Hawick 137 [anno 1727] Walter Scott, town councillor, is degraded as such by the council..in respect of his twice breaking prison, after being convict by the bailies of a riot.
1867 E. A. Freeman Hist. Norman Conquest I. vi. 490 Others he put in prison, others he embowelled.
1897 Daily News 30 Aug. 5/1 Prison for lads should be the last, and not the first, resort.
1948 A. Paton Cry, Beloved Country i. xiv. 96 He is in prison, arrested for the murder of a white man.
1974 M. Tippett Moving into Aquarius 22 When I was in prison I was struck..by the gaiety and vitality of the group of comrades there.
1997 Daily Tel. 19 Dec. 9/1 The judges..ruled as unlawful the policy..that ‘whole life’ tariff prisoners would not be able to gain release later through their progress in prison and lack of dangerousness to society.
b. With article or other designation. A building or other facility to which people are legally committed as punishment for a crime or while awaiting trial.In North America, prison denotes a facility run by the state or federal government for those who have been convicted of serious crimes, in contrast to a locally run facility for those awaiting trial or convicted of minor offences. Cf. jail n., state prison n. at state n. Compounds 3a.
ΘΚΠ
society > authority > punishment > imprisonment > prison > [noun]
quarternOE
prisona1200
jailc1275
lodgec1290
galleya1300
chartrea1325
ward1338
keepingc1384
prison-house1419
lying-house1423
javel1483
tollbooth1488
kidcotec1515
clinkc1530
warding-place1571
the hangman's budget1589
Newgate1592
gehenna1594
Lob's pound1597
caperdewsie1599
footman's inn1604
cappadochio1607
pena1640
marshalsea1652
log-house1662
bastille1663
naskin1673
state prison1684
tronk1693
stone-doublet1694
iron or stone doublet1698
college1699
nask1699
quod1699
shop1699
black hole1707
start1735
coop1785
blockhouse1796
stone jug1796
calaboose1797
factory1806
bull-pen1809
steel1811
jigger1812
jug1815
kitty1825
rock pile1830
bughouse1842
zindan1844
model1845
black house1846
tench1850
mill1851
stir1851
hoppet1855
booby hatch1859
caboose1865
cooler1872
skookum house1873
chokey1874
gib1877
nick1882
choker1884
logs1888
booby house1894
big house1905
hoosegow1911
can1912
detention camp1916
pokey1919
slammer1952
joint1953
slam1960
society > authority > subjection > restraint or restraining > restraint depriving of liberty > confinement > [noun] > place of confinement
lockOE
prisona1200
jailc1400
pinfoldc1400
mewa1425
pounda1500
coop1579
confine1603
stockade1865
monkey house1910
a1200 MS Trin. Cambr. in R. Morris Old Eng. Homilies (1873) 2nd Ser. 131 (MED) He was bihaueded on herodes prisone.
c1330 King of Tars (Auch.) 734 in Englische Studien (1889) 11 50 (MED) Ichaue ben in þe prisoun of ston Wiþ wrong.
c1384 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Douce 369(2)) (1850) Deeds v. 23 We founden the prisoun schit with al diligence.
c1400 (?c1380) Patience l. 79 (MED) Þay ta me bylyue, Pynez me in a prysoun, put me in stokkes.
1490 W. Caxton tr. Eneydos xxxii. 120 Thus eschaped dedalus oute of the pryson of Mynos kynge of Crete.
c1540 (?a1400) Gest Historiale Destr. Troy 3518 The kyng þen comaund to..fetur hir fast in a fre prisoune.
1562 Act 5 Eliz. xxiii. §8 The same Party..shall remain in the Prison..without Bail, Baston or Mainprize.
1600 J. Pory tr. J. Leo Africanus Geogr. Hist. Afr. 33 There are no prisons in al his empire: for..iustice is executed out of hand.
1649 R. Lovelace To Althea from Prison in Lucasta 98 Stone Walls doe not a Prison make, Nor Iron bars a Cage.
1698 C. Mather Diary (1911) I. 271 There are many Miserables, at this Time, in our Prison.
1739 D. Hume Treat. Human Nature II. iii. 302 Thus a man in a strong prison well-guarded, without the least means of escape, trembles at the thought of the rack, to which he is sentenc'd.
1777 J. Howard (title) The State of the Prisons in England and Wales, with Preliminary Observations, and an account of some foreign Prisons.
1823 Act 4 Geo. IV c. 64 §76 Nothing in this Act contained shall extend to the..Prison of Bridewell, nor to the Fleet Prison, or to the Prison of the Marshalsea.
1852 J. West Hist. Tasmania ii. 150 They departed from the prison with huzzas..exclaiming, ‘what a glorious kangaroo hunt he will have at the Bay’.
1885 Major Griffiths in Encycl. Brit. XIX. 755/2 Where the sentence passes beyond two years..the prisoner becomes a convict, and undergoes his penalty in one or more of the convict prisons.
1914 A. C. McLaughlin & A. B. Hart Cycl. Amer. Govt. III. 64/2 Public sentiment in favor of separate prisons for women is rapidly growing.
1950 H. Patterson & E. Conrad Scottsboro Boy ii. vii. 133 He would go around the prison saying to anybody about anybody, ‘I kill the sonofabitch, I sure kill the sonofabitch.’
1994 Time 7 Feb. 59/1 Jails, which are designed for short-term incarceration, provide few educational or work opportunities. Prisons do better.
c. In extended use.
ΚΠ
a1225 (?OE) MS Lamb. in R. Morris Old Eng. Homilies (1868) 1st Ser. 33 (MED) Soðliche, on cristes prisune nis nan of þis sere—þet is, in helle.
?c1225 (?a1200) Ancrene Riwle (Cleo. C.vi) (1972) 44 Eue..leop..to helle þer ha lei iprisun. fouwer þusent ȝer & mare.
c1384 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Royal) 1 Pet. iii. 19 To hem that weren closid to gydere in prisoun he comynge in spirit prechide [1611 He went and preached vnto the spirits in prison].
a1387 J. Trevisa tr. R. Higden Polychron. (St. John's Cambr.) (1876) VI. 377 Aluredus..ladde uncerteyn and unesy lyf in þe wode contrayes of Somersete..Aluredus com out of prison [L. ergastulum].
c1400 (c1378) W. Langland Piers Plowman (Laud 581) (1869) B. xi. 128 Resoun shal..casten hym in arrerage, And putten hym after in a prisone in purgatorie to brenne.
c1460 (a1449) J. Lydgate Legend St. Austin (Harl. 2255) l. 252 in Minor Poems (1911) i. 201 (MED) This hundryd yeer I have enduryd peyne..In a dirk prisoun of desolacioun Mong firy flawmys.
1509 S. Hawes Pastime of Pleasure (1845) xxxii. 157 This False Reporte hath broken pryson, With his subtyl crafte and evyl treason.
1526 W. Bonde Pylgrimage of Perfection iii. sig. BB The cytie is to me a prisone and the wyldernesse a paradyse.
1605 Bp. J. Hall Medit. & Vowes II. §5 I may not breake prison, till I bee loosed by death.
a1616 W. Shakespeare Hamlet (1623) ii. ii. 244 Ham. What haue you..deserued at the hands of Fortune, that she sends you to Prison hither? Guil. Prison, my Lord? Ham. Denmark's a Prison.
1719 D. Defoe Life Robinson Crusoe 113 The Island was certainly a Prison to me.
1776 E. Gibbon Decline & Fall I. iii. 84 When that empire fell into the hands of a single person, the world became a secure and dreary prison for his enemies.
1835 J. Ross Narr. Second Voy. North-west Passage xxxiii. 473 Our winter prison was before us.
1880 W. Smith & H. Wace Dict. Christian Biogr. II. 196/1 So Cyril of Jerusalem..speaks of Christ as descending to Hades... The souls that had been long in prison were set free.
1914 S. Lewis Our Mr. Wrenn vi. 79 Then he remembered that he was in the cold and friendless prison of England.
1985 P. Abrahams View from Coyaba ii. ii. 81 Perhaps their former slave masters had made a prison for their minds.
2003 D. Rowe Depression (ed. 3) 235 If you want to find within the context of your Christian beliefs your way out of the prison of depression, you should consider making a retreat.
d. In roulette and related board games: a position on the board where bets are held in abeyance until the next round of play; spec. to put (a stake) in prison.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > entertainment > pastimes > game > games of chance > roulette > [noun] > compartments
prison1793
zero1823
1793 Faro & Rouge et Noir 68 The punters who win by the next event, having won their half stake back, redeem their stakes out of prison, the others lose the other half.
1867 H. G. Bohn et al. Hand-bk. Games (new ed.) 346 The punters may..have their stake moved into the middle semicircles of the colour they then choose, called ‘la première prison’, the first prison, to be determined by the next event, whether they lose all or are set at liberty.
1940 P. G. Wodehouse Eggs, Beans & Crumpets 32 When Zero turns up..stakes on the even chances aren't scooped up—they are what is called put in prison.
1977 P. Arnold Encycl. Gambling 247/1 Prison, a convention whereby a stake on the even-money chances at roulette is left on the table, or ‘put in prison’ when zero appears, to be either retained by the bettor or lost according to the next spin.
1993 S. Kuriscak Casino Talk 32 In Prison. In European roulette, the holding of all bets placed on even chances until the next spin, because the current roll landed on zero.
e. prison-without-bars n. colloquial an open prison (see open adj. 3c).
ΘΚΠ
society > authority > punishment > imprisonment > prison > [noun] > open prison
training prison1899
prison-without-bars1929
1929 Lima (Ohio) News 28 Dec. 4/1 A prison without bars. In Ontario there is a prison the like of which cannot be found anywhere in the United States.
1952 ‘J. Henry’ Who lie in Gaol v. 69 I heard a great deal of the many advantages I would enjoy at the prison-without-bars at York.
1993 Independent (Nexis) 25 Sept. 51 It was filmed entirely on location in an experimental prison-without-bars in Chino, California, where, for three months, Bartlett shared the convicts' duties, meals and sleeping quarters.
2. A prisoner. Obsolete.Quot. a1225 may exemplify sense 1a.
ΘΚΠ
society > authority > punishment > imprisonment > prisoner > [noun]
prisona1225
prisonerc1384
enpresonéc1425
bird1580
warder1584
canary bird1593
penitentiala1633
convict1786
chum1819
lag1819
lagger1819
new chum1819
nut-brown1835
collegian1837
canary1840
Sydney duck1873
forty1879
zebra1882
con1893
yardbird1956
zek1968
society > armed hostility > warrior > defeated or conquered > [noun] > prisoner of war
prizec1330
prisonera1375
prison1438
prisoner of war1608
POW1903
a1225 (?OE) MS Lamb. in R. Morris Old Eng. Homilies (1868) 1st Ser. 13 Ȝe beoð iscald [read iseald] eower feonde to prisune.
?c1225 (?a1200) Ancrene Riwle (Cleo. C.vi) (1972) 27 Þe[o þet þolieð þe pine] þet prisuns doð [c1230 Corpus Cambr. þe pinen þe prisuns þolieð & habbeð] þer heo ligeð wið iren ibunden.
c1330 (?c1300) Guy of Warwick (Auch.) l. 1994 Þe prisouns wiþ hem þai lede.
a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Vesp.) 4436 All þe prisuns [v.rr. presunes, prisouns] þat þar was Þat oþer in prisun war or band.
c1400 (c1378) W. Langland Piers Plowman (Laud 581) (1869) B. xviii. 58 Pitousliche and pale as a prisoun þat deyeth.
1438 tr. Bk. Alexander Great (1831) 4 Thay tuik na tent to tak presounis.
a1500 (?c1425) Speculum Sacerdotale (1936) 125 (MED) Alle kyndes of presoynes, of peynes of jayles and of jebbet, þat day we oweþ to relese.
a1513 R. Fabyan New Cronycles Eng. & Fraunce (1516) II. f. cxlviiv They..toke with them all seyntwary men, & the Prysons of Newgate, Ludgate, & of bothe Counters.
a1616 W. Shakespeare Cymbeline (1623) iii. iii. 33 Trauailing a bed, A Prison, or a Debtor.

Phrases

to go to prison: to be sent to or put in prison or other place of confinement.
ΚΠ
1483 W. Caxton tr. J. de Voragine Golden Legende f. cvjv/1 I wil that thou paye me agayn or ellis incontynent thou shalt goo to pryson.
1525 Ld. Berners tr. J. Froissart Cronycles II. f. cviiv/1 It is clerely determynyd by the hole generall counsayle that ye must go to prison, in to ye towre of London.
1657 T. Jordan Walks Islington & Hogsdon iii. ii. sig. E2 The French Knight's arrested at the suit of Mr. Bonaventure an English Merchant for 6000. pound, is gone to prison, no bayl will be taken.
1710 O. Sansom Acct. Life 73 He..threatned me before Witness, That if I did not pay him, I must expect to go to Prison.
1777 R. Watson Hist. Reign Philip II I. viii. 204 It is the will of the king that you..go to prison.
1827 A. N. Royall Tennessean xxvi. 275 ‘Gentlemen,’ said the magistrate, ‘must this man go to prison? will none of you venture to bail him?’
1898 Daily News 21 Feb. 5/6 In this astonishing country a gentleman of repute chooses his own time for going to prison.
1927 H. Ford & H. J. O'Higgins Argyle Case iii. 85 I shall never go to prison again! If I'm caught, I'll kill myself.
1996 Big Issue 5 Aug. 10/2 Roger went to prison but he never squealed on his pal.

Compounds

C1. General attributive.
a. In sense ‘of or relating to a prison or prisons’.
prison accommodation n.
ΚΠ
1859 H. C. Coape tr. E. About Rom. Question 35 To be sure they are sent to prison now and then, but thanks to a favourable word in the right quarter, or to the want of prison accommodation, they are soon set at liberty.
2000 S. McConville in L. Fairweather & S. McConville Prison Archit. (2003) i. 1 In 1978, less than a quarter of prison accommodation in England and Wales was twentieth century and purpose-built.
prison bed n.
ΚΠ
1787 E. Smith Brethren iii. 86 Last night, asleep upon my prison bed, A vine, in three luxuriant branches spread.
1810 R. Southey Curse of Kehama xvi. 180 Despairingly, he let himself again Fall prostrate on his prison-bed of stone.
1990 A. W. Price Love & Friendship in Plato & Aristotle 225 The tone is closer to that of Socrates' affectionate toying with Phaedo's hair as Phaedo sits beneath him by his prison bed.
prison boat n.
ΚΠ
1822 S. Rogers Italy: Pt. 1st xii. 86 Most nights arrived The prison-boat.
1911 S. A. Clark Making both Ends Meet 76 The officers guarded the girls to the prison boat for their return to New York.
2004 Daily Tel. (Nexis) 10 Aug. 12 There are only two ways into and out of Petak: by foot along two rickety wooden bridges, or by prison boat.
prison building n.
ΚΠ
1777 J. Howard State Prisons Eng. & Wales iv. 140 There is at Ghent a new Prison building by the States of Austrian Flanders.
1851 J. W. Barber Hist. Coll. State of N.Y. 61 The prison buildings stand back about 80 feet from the road.
1992 J. M. Kelly Short Hist. Western Legal Theory viii. 343 He conceived a prison building which he called the Panopticon (‘see-all’), a set of radiating passages which could be easily surveyed by a single watching eye at the centre.
prison cell n.
ΚΠ
1772 J. Macgowan Infernal Conf. II. xvii. 234 The merchant is apprehended, his estate confiscated; he is immured in the prison cells till consumed, either by famine or vermin.
1866 All Year Round 27 Jan. 71/2 Two inmates of our workhouse were recently put into what is pleasantly called the ‘separation ward’. It was a close dirty hole worse than any prison cell.
1985 N. Sahgal Rich like Us xx. 213 Strange things happened in prison cells. Aurobindo, a bomb-throwing terrorist..set up an ashram and became a spiritual leader.
prison chaplain n.
ΘΚΠ
society > faith > church government > member of the clergy > chaplain > [noun] > prison
prison chaplain1728
1728 J. Gay Beggar's Opera Notes Ordinary's Papers: the prison chaplain's record of confessions.
1897 C. Whibley Bk. of Scoundrels 17 The Prison Chaplain, encouraging him to a final act of hypocrisy, gives him a free pass (so to say) into another and more exclusive world.
1999 Mail on Sunday 26 Sept. 67/4 A prison chaplain (formerly a KGB officer) pipes American Born-Again Country and Western ballads..into the cells.
prison clock n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > time > instruments for measuring time > clock > [noun] > other types of clock
watch-clock1592
German clock1598
quarter clocka1631
wheel-clock1671
table clocka1684
month clock1712
astronomical clock1719
musical clock1721
repeater1725
Tompion1727
pulling clock1733
regulator1735
eight-day clock1741
regulator clock1750
French clock1757
repetition clock1765
day clock1766
striker1778
chiming clock1789
cuckoo-clock1789
night clock1823
telltale1827
carriage clock1828
fly-clock1830
steeple clock1830
telltale clock1832
skeleton clock1842
telegraph clock1842
star clock1850
weight-clock1850
prison clock1853
crystal clock1854
pillar scroll top clock1860
sheep's-head clock1872
presentation clock1875
pillar clock1880
stop-clock1881
Waterbury1882
calendar-clock1884
ting-tang clock1884
birdcage clock1886
sheep's head1887
perpetual calendar1892
bracket clock1894
Act of Parliament clock1899
cartel clock1899
banjo-clock1903
master clock1904
lantern clock1913
time clock1919
evolutionary clock1922
lancet clock1922
atomic clock1927
quartz clock1934
clock radio1946
real-time clock1953
organ clock1956
molecular clock1974
travelling clock2014
1853 F. A. Durivage Life Scenes 23 Can you not see the prison clock through the bars of your cell door.
2004 Bradenton Herald (Nexis) 4 Apr. (Sports section) 4 With the exception of Ernie Els, who survived a playoff to win at Muirfield, recent major winners have been as faceless as a prison clock.
Prison Commission n.
ΚΠ
1866 N. Amer. Rev. Oct. 385 The newly established Prison Commission of California..hardly had time to contribute to the literature of the subject.
1996 Daily Tel. 23 Aug. 3/2 Pierrepoint appealed to his employers, the Prison Commission, who said it was a matter between him and the under-sheriff.
prison discipline n.
ΘΚΠ
society > authority > punishment > imprisonment > prisoner > [noun] > order maintained among
prison discipline1790
1790 Life of Late John Howard 25 This system of prison discipline is, with very little variation, adopted throughout the United provinces.
1834 J. S. Mill in Monthly Repos. 8 590 Has not a notion grown up within a few years, (we believe a very false one), that the increased mildness of prison-discipline has made our gaols..places where the prisoner is actually too comfortable, and too well off?
1985 F. Heidensohn Women & Crime (BNC) 73 By far the highest rates of offences against prison discipline occur in female establishments.
prison dream n.
ΚΠ
a1835 F. D. Hemans Poet. Remains (1836) 58 Is thy gaze of reverent love profound, Unto these dear parental faces bound, Which, with their silvery hair, so oft glanced by, Haunting thy prison-dreams?
2004 Daily News (New Plymouth, N.Z.) (Nexis) 3 July (Features section) 17 In Dahab he re-enacted his prison dream by chilling out in cosy cafes while watching the waves roll in.
prison dress n.
ΚΠ
1788 E. Inchbald Such Things Are v. ii. 62 Second Keeper opens a door, and Twineall enters a prisoner, in one of the prison dresses.
c1863 T. Taylor in M. R. Booth Eng. Plays of 19th Cent. (1969) II. 107 I passed out at the gate, not..in my prison dress, with my prison mates..but..a free man.
1979 T. Barling Olympic Sleeper xv. 195 She wore a shapeless grey prison dress.
2004 Village Voice (N.Y.) (Nexis) 8 June (Nation section) 22 It was a strange order because she had nothing on, apart from her prison dress.
prison garment n.
ΚΠ
1560 Bible (Geneva) Jer. lii. 33 Euil-merodach..broght him out of prison,..And changed his prison garments [ Coverdale clothes of his preson].
1629 F. Hubert Egypts Favorite sig. F8 The Prison garment to a Robe of Price, The groanes of wretched Soules to cheerefull tunes.
1728 W. Reading Fifty Two Serm. I. xi. 134 He had trimmed himself, and changed his prison garments: and being naturally a very comely man, he appeared to great advantage.
1875 A. Trollope Prime Minister (1876) I. xi. 176 It is easy for most of us to keep our hands from picking and stealing when picking and stealing plainly lead to prison diet and prison garments.
1995 New Internationalist Mag. (BNC) He wore the soft, white, flowing robes of a monk..as though it were a prison garment.
prison ground n.
ΚΠ
a1500 (?c1300) Bevis of Hampton (Chetham) l. 1311 Whan he was down in preson ground, Beues handis they on-bound.
1853 C. Brontë Villette I. xii. 216 Little Gustave, on account of his illness, has been removed to a master's chamber—that favoured chamber, whose lattice overlooks your prison-ground.
1935 M. Anderson Winterset 50 This sleet and rain that I feel cold here on my face and hands will find him under thirteen years of clay in prison ground.
2003 N.Y. Times Bk. Rev. 9 Feb. 13/2 Men..legally marry one of their ‘stand-up girls’ so they can have ‘trailers’—conjugal visits, named after the RV's on the prison grounds where they take place.
prison guard n.
ΘΚΠ
society > authority > punishment > imprisonment > prisoner > [noun] > jailer
jailerc1290
prisonera1325
officer?1387
claviculer1447
javeler?c1450
key turner1606
baston1607
twistkey1617
prison keeper1623
detainer1647
prison officer1649
turnkey1655
imprisoner1656
phylacist1656
cipier1671
wardsman1683
goodman1698
prison guard1722
screw1812
dungeoner1817
dubsman1839
cell-keeper1841
prison warder1854
warder1855
dubs1882
twirl1891
hack1914
correction officer1940
1722 J. Sterling Rival Generals i. i. 15 I know the Captain of the Prison Guards, Aw'd by the Authority of your Name.., Will ne'er dispute the noble Captive's Freedom.
1853 C. Dickens Bleak House lii. 497 What with his coolness and his soldierly bearing, he looked far more like the prison guard.
1961 W. T. Ballard Night Riders i. 15 Two wore the uniform of prison guards, three the striped suits of convicts.
2004 Loaded Mar. 72/3 Welcome to Isla Maria Madre off the west coast of Mexico. There are no bars, no cells—‘colonists’ live in houses—no uniforms and only 36 (unarmed) prison guards for the 3,000 inmates.
prison hour n.
ΚΠ
1730 J. Thomson Summer in Seasons 89 Raleigh..with his prison-hours enrich'd the world.
a1854 J. Wilson Poet. Wks. (1858) ii. ii. 197 O strive to think on other prison-hours, When, on your knees together, lost in prayer, You seemed two happy Beings offering up Thanksgiving.
1979 Associated Press Newswire (Nexis) 30 June Miss Fleener said she spent a lot of prison hours reading about Zionism and said she understands why the Israelis fear the PLO.
2003 Australian (Nexis) 20 May (Local section) 4 Speight and about 12 co-accused keep prison hours but beyond that they are largely left to their own devices.
prison labour n.
ΚΠ
1806 T. Clarkson Portraiture of Quakerism 201 An agreement is usually made about the price of prison-labour between the inspector of the gaol and the employers of the criminals.
1994 Peace Mag. May 24/2 The Federal Bureau of Prisons..boasts that prison labor contributes significantly to the military.
prison library n.
ΘΚΠ
society > communication > book > library or collection of books > library, place, or institution > [noun] > other types
public library1597
lending library1708
travelling library?1727
book society1739
book club1740
circulating library1742
free library1746
county library1748
library of reference1809
reference library1821
prison library1847
branch library1862
copyright library1898
bookmobile1924
1847 Biblical Repertory Apr. 306 The use of good books from the prison library.
1995 Sat. Night (Toronto) June 92/1 It turned out that he had taken a novel out of the prison library, about coming of age in Montana and Wyoming, and had reset it in Wales.
prison officer n.
ΘΚΠ
society > authority > punishment > imprisonment > prisoner > [noun] > jailer
jailerc1290
prisonera1325
officer?1387
claviculer1447
javeler?c1450
key turner1606
baston1607
twistkey1617
prison keeper1623
detainer1647
prison officer1649
turnkey1655
imprisoner1656
phylacist1656
cipier1671
wardsman1683
goodman1698
prison guard1722
screw1812
dungeoner1817
dubsman1839
cell-keeper1841
prison warder1854
warder1855
dubs1882
twirl1891
hack1914
correction officer1940
1649 Modest Narr. Intelligence No. 18. 142 In the disorder a woman was kill'd by one of the Prison Officers, another hurt.
1848 N. Amer. Rev. Jan. 149 We have traced a considerable portion of them to the authorities cited, the printed reports of the prison officers and Parliamentary documents.
1961 Observer 9 Apr. 22/8 He refers to prison officers as prison warders, a title abandoned something like thirty years ago.
2002 Times 18 Jan. ii. 25/2 The work of the prison officer Ian Robertson, who set up patchworking classes three years ago.
prison official n.
ΚΠ
1846 U.S. Mag. & Democratic Rev. Mar. 205/1 We were turned out into the yard, where we found a number of prison officials waiting for us.
1994 Amer. Spectator Sept. 71/2 Once behind bars, he was transferred to a different facility after prison officials discovered a female visitor had fellated him.
prison pallor n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > inaction > disinclination to act or listlessness > [noun] > specific type of
prison pallor1896
cabin fever1918
society > authority > punishment > imprisonment > prison > [noun] > effects in prison > prisoner lethargy
prison pallor1896
1896 Harper's Mag. Dec. 89/1 His skin was fair and freckled, and had the prison pallor, face and hands.
1935 A. J. Cronin Stars look Down ii. xx. 446 He sat there with his prison pallor upon him.
2004 Australian (Nexis) 10 June (Features section) 16 Whyte, who rarely agrees to interviews, is 31 and has the prison-pallor of someone who sees more nightclub stand-up than sun.
prison photograph n.
ΚΠ
1873 Times 9 Dec. 10/2 Asked to look at the fingers in the prison photograph, he was asked if there was not the appearance of a wart.
1981 Times 16 Sept. 6/5 The state television showed prison photographs of arrested terrorists.
2005 Independent (Nexis) 17 Aug. 25 Lena Baker in a prison photograph taken in 1945.
prison-piety n. Obsolete rare
ΚΠ
1677 (title) Prison-Pietie: or, meditations divine and moral. Digested into poetical heads..By Samuel Speed, prisoner in Ludgate.
prison reform n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > amending > [noun] > reform > instance of > specific kinds of reform
radical reform1777
radical reformation1781
prison reform1819
1819 Times 7 July 3/2 The information exhibited in this report be of the first importance to the advocates for prison reform, and indeed to all who would blend mercy with justice.
1995 T. G. Blomberg & S. Cohen Punishment & Social Control 10 It would be difficult to understand the specifics of prison reform without looking at broader changes in the theory and methods of punishment.
prison rhyme n. rare
ΚΠ
1845 T. Cooper (title) The purgatory of suicides; a prison-rhyme in ten books.
1916 T. Hake & A. Compton-Rickett Life & Lett. T. Watts-Dunton I. vii. 179 Faulty and marred by affectation as is the ballad [sc. The Ballad of Reading Gaol], in it is nevertheless a vital poem which has survived, partly..because there is a peculiar and narrow place open and ready to receive it, the place devoted to prison rhymes.
1979 N. Mailer Executioner's Song Afterword 1052 The old prison rhyme at the beginning and end of this book is not, alas, an ancient ditty but a new one, and was written by this author ten years ago for his movie Maidstone.
prison roof n.
ΚΠ
1655 H. Lawes Sel. Psalms 2 May my speechlesse Tongue give sound To no Accent, but remain To my prison Roof fast bound, If my sad Soul entertain Mirth till Thou rejoice again.
1795 J. Palmer Haunted Cavern (1796) 197 One stormy night, the rain beat hard against my prison roof.
1859 C. Dickens Tale of Two Cities iii. v. 186 Sometimes when she had quite forgotten him in gazing at the prison roof and grates,..she would come to herself to find him looking at her, with his knee on his bench and his saw stopped in its work.
1989 K. Logan Paganism & Occult (BNC) 101 Later, as a ‘Christian evangelist’, Gary would speak of meeting God in the hours of comparative tranquility on the prison roof.
prison sister n.
ΚΠ
1908 N.E.D. at Prison sb. Prison sister.
2002 Palm Beach Post (Florida) (Nexis) 17 Nov. d1 Jessica is no longer the youngest inmate at Dade Correctional... Still, her prison sisters say, Jessica remains their ‘baby’—mostly because she enjoys the role.
prison-thrall n. Obsolete
ΚΠ
1633 P. Fletcher Purple Island vii. viii. 86 There lies he now bruis'd with so sore a fall, To his base bonds, and loathsome prison thrall.
1866 J. H. Newman Dream of Gerontius i. 12 Rescue..the two Apostles from their prison-thrall.
prison torture n.
ΚΠ
1827 Mirror Lit., Amusem., & Instr. 27 Oct. 206/1 Prison torture. A horrible instance of human vengeance occurred a short time since, at Minden, in Westphalia.
1995 Entertainm. Weekly 19 May 23/1 Even the most admirable socially conscious dramas are no-win during the spring; this year's thanks-but-no-thanks subjects included prison torture (Murder in the First)..and the war in Macedonia (Before the Rain).
prison wall n.
ΘΚΠ
society > authority > punishment > imprisonment > prison > [noun] > wall
prison wall?1579
?1579 Woorthie Enterprise I. Foxe in R. Hakluyt Princ. Navigations (1589) i. 153 Amongst the Turkes was one..who..fell off from the toppe of the prison wall, and made such a lowing that the inhabitants..came and dawed him.
1646 T. Jordan Divine Raptures 12 Harke how the impatient seas beginne to thunder, As if they'd rent their prison walls in sunder.
1709 I. Watts Horæ Lyricæ (ed. 2) i. 101 Devotion breaks the Prison-Walls, And speeds my last Remove.
1855 A. Trollope Warden xvi. 248 No convict, slipping down from a prison wall, ever feared to see the gaoler more entirely than Mr. Harding did to see his son-in-law.
1898 O. Wilde Ballad of Reading Gaol 16 The weeping prison-wall.
1997 J. Seabrook Deeper Pref. 15 The coded tappings on the prison walls made by the prisoners in Arthur Koestler's book Darkness at Noon.
prison warden n.
ΚΠ
1856 Hornellsville (N.Y.) Tribune 3 Apr. 2/1 Mayors, magistrates, police officers,..prison wardens and ministers of religion..have all testified to its [sc. prohibition's] vast achievements for humanity and good morals.
1908 Amer. Jrnl. Sociol. 14 429 With..this..will come the necessity of replacing our present prison wardens with trained, intelligent, and sympathetic keepers.
1996 SFX May 51/1 Studio two contains a cell, a prison warden's office, a medical lab and a missile warhead store.
prison watch-tower n.
ΚΠ
1655 (title) The Oppressed Close Prisoner In Windsor-Castle, his Defiance to The Father of Lyes. By Chr. Feake, in his Prison-Watch-tower.
1994 Dallas Morning News (Nexis) 3 Apr. g6 Its turrets are reminiscent of prison watchtowers. The catwalks recall the ghettos of Poland.
prison yard n.
ΘΚΠ
society > authority > punishment > imprisonment > prison > [noun] > yard
prison yard?1640
yard1777
ring1898
compound1946
?1640 J. Lilburne Coppy Let. 3 And my Friends..did goe up into Thomas Deanes room over against me, that so they might know how it fared with me, there being the breadth of the Prison yard betwixt us.
1776 Jrnls. Continental Congr. 1774–89 (Libr. of Congr.) (1906) IV. 121 Resolved, That the said J. Connolly be allowed..to walk in the prison yard or hall.
1851 J. J. Lancaster in Rep. Sel. Comm. Passengers' Act 142 in Parl. Papers XIX. 1 Those in Millbank [sc. a London military hospital] are drawn up in the prison-yard or wards.
1995 K. Toolis Rebel Hearts (1996) iii. 156 One day we were walking in the prison yard and this prisoner turns round to me and says: ‘Do you know them pistols point two fives?’
b. In sense ‘confined in a prison’.
prison author n.
ΚΠ
1907 Westm. Gaz. 23 Oct. 16/2 Mrs. Price..had many distinguished predecessors as prison-authors. It was in Newgate that Defoe wrote his ‘Jure Divino’ [etc.].
2004 Centre Daily Times (Nexis) 26 Mar. 15 His latest, adapted from a novel by the late prison author Donald Goines, is a dramatized obituary of King David (rapper DMX), a drug kingpin.
prison-slave n.
ΚΠ
1553 J. Brende tr. Q. Curtius Rufus Hist. v. f. 83 Shall our chyldren, shall our brethren acknowledge vs, beyng prison slaues?
1992 Associated Press Newswire (Nexis) 23 Apr. American trade with China needs to be linked to human rights progress. We should not be buying products from them that are made by prison-slave labor.
prison woman n.
ΚΠ
1854 A. S. Stephens Fashion & Famine xxxix. 424 You would hardly have recognized the prison woman, in that neatly clad rosy cheeked female.
1957 S. Harris & J. M. Murtagh Cast First Stone 276 If you listened to prison women, you would think there was not a sexually normal officer in the whole sad, strange prison world.
2003 Sun-Sentinel (Fort Lauderdale, Florida) (Nexis) 13 July 3 I've been given a vision, and I go back and minister to the prison women.
c. In sense ‘serving as a prison or place of confinement’.
prison chamber n.
ΚΠ
1570 J. Foxe Actes & Monumentes (rev. ed.) II. 1394/1 Marbecke now beyng in his prison chamber, fel to his busines.
1648 T. Gage Eng.-Amer. xiii. 97 Wee knew that wee should have that night in our prison chambers a better supper than any of those before us, who fed upon their three or foure dishes.
1797 A. Radcliffe Italian II. i. 23 The passage..probably led to the prison-chamber, which Olivia had described.
1860 N. Hawthorne Marble Faun I. xxiv. 269 Some of them were prison chambers in times past, as old Tomaso will tell you.
1993 E. C. Bartels Spectacles of Strangeness 143 Indeed, the regicide takes place in a prison chamber, closed off from the public gaze, unseen even by the king.
prison farm n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > farming > farm > [noun] > other farms
home farm1749
city farm1750
county farm1785
factory farm1824
bird farm1842
provision farm1846
spade-farm1848
bush-farm1851
poor farm1852
sewage farm1870
cacao farm1871
mixed farm1872
vertical farm1897
prison farm1961
nuplex1968
1862 Compilation Laws of State N.Y. 642 (subtitle) An Act to permit the Water Commissioners..to construct their Aqueduct through the State Prison Farm.]
1961 Atlanta Constit. 4 Nov. 1 The jury praised the administration and operation of the Atlanta Police Department, the Fulton Tax Commissioner's Office, the Bellwood and Alpharetta prison farms, [etc.].
2000 N.Y. Times 1 Jan. a12/3 Three days after a prison guard and an inmate were killed in an escape attempt at the Louisiana State Penitentiary, law-enforcement officials in the area raised questions about the security of the prison farm known as Angola.
prison fort n.
ΚΠ
1853 N. Wiseman Ess. III. 20 An African..prison-fort, where galley-slaves are detained.
1993 Boston Globe (Nexis) 23 June 2 In the Spanish prison fort, many of the imprisoned army officers were once involved in intelligence or antisubversive work.
2004 Morning Star (Nexis) 22 Mar. 2 President Thabo Mbeki inaugurated South Africa's new Constitutional Court building yesterday in a notorious 100-year-old prison fort where Nelson Mandela, Mahatma Gandhi and captured Boer war generals were all detained.
prison fortress n.
ΚΠ
1800 Narr. Sketches Conquest Mysore 82 All the other British captives who had survived their sufferings in the different prison fortresses of Tippoo's dominions.
1830 M. W. Shelley Fortunes Perkin Warbeck I. vii. 130 He was led back to the prison-fortress, despairing, but unresisting.
1923 F. J. Mather Hist. Ital. Painting 40 There were allegories of a strong and weak state, in the Bargello, the prison-fortress of the Captain of the People.
2004 N.Y. Times (Nexis) 22 July (Foreign Desk section) 10/5 He may have failed to provide the close oversight last fall that could have prevented the debacle at Abu Ghraib, the prison fortress 20 miles west.
prison hold n.
ΚΠ
1740 On Resurrection 6 in F. Peck New Mem. Life & Wks. John Milton sig. 2N2v Thy all subduing arm Hath burst the mighty prison hold of Death, And op'd the golden portals of bright heav'n To all believers!
1837 T. Chalmers Lect. Rom. I. iv. 68 They chain it, as it were, in the prison-hold of their own corruptions.
1938 Frederick (Maryland) Post 24 Feb. 9/1 It was not until they were in the prison hold again that Cabell Banks said confidently: ‘This is our time to escape.’
prison hospital n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > health and disease > healing > places for the sick or injured > [noun] > hospital or infirmary > infirmary in a prison
prison hospital1784
farm1865
1784 T. Day Considerations on Removing Infectious Air 16 William Cutbush, a smith, who mended the hole in the prison hospital, through which one of the felons had made his way out.
1853 H. B. Stowe Key to Uncle Tom's Cabin xiii. 58/2 He was soon promoted to be steward of the prison hospital.
1933 J. Buchan Prince of Captivity ii. i. 178 You would spend some weeks in a prison hospital till they patched you up.
2000 M. Kneale Eng. Passengers (2001) xi. 304 Captain James insisted that Dr Potter visit the prison hospital.
prison pit n.
ΚΠ
a1475 Sidrak & Bokkus (Lansd.) (Ph.D. diss., Univ. of Washington) (1965) 8117 (MED) As a derke prisoun pitte Þat no light shineþ in itte.
1646 P. Bulkley Gospel-covenant i. 21 To see the children of our father in the dungeon, and prison-pit.
1869 W. Smith Dict. Bible II. 1257/2 The princes of Judah..threw him into the prison-pit, to die there.
1990 Washington Post (Nexis) 30 Sept. d1 Imprisoned in one of UNITA's damp prison pits dug deep into the soil, the rotund and jovial Sangumba is alleged to have dwindled to a thin, haggard and sickly reflection of himself before he died.
prison place n.
ΚΠ
1743 London Mag. 449/2 Down again it went to the old Prison Place, till by its Detainment it kill'd its foolish Possessor.
1896 Times 18 Apr. 13/1 Their present prison place is a pleasant little villa at Sunnyside, with grounds and gardens attached.
1908 N.E.D. at Prison sb. Prison place.
prison room n.
ΚΠ
1680 R. Baxter Church-hist. Govt. Bishops iii. 45 A Curtain over the midst of the prison-room.
1724 B. Langley Descr. Newgate 24 You are commanded to repair to your Prison Room..where you are securely lock'd up.
1810 W. Scott Lady of Lake vi. 259 'Twas a prison-room Of stern security and gloom.
1982 Times 14 May 13/2 The sisters thrash out their memories and beliefs in bleak surroundings—a museum cafeteria, prison rooms.
2005 N.Y. Post (Nexis) 18 Nov. 55 A young daughter isn't even allowed to leave the prison room to go to the bathroom.
prison ship n.
ΘΚΠ
society > authority > punishment > imprisonment > prison > [noun] > ships used as prisons
prison ship1779
hulk1797
brig1852
1779 Remembrancer 8 81/1 I remained on board the prison ship till the beginning of August, when Mr. Murray came on board.
1853 R. H. Horne in Househ. Words 17 Sept. 53/1 The prison-ship contains the worst of the worst.
1902 W. D. Hulbert Forest Neighbors 110 They journeyed on for nearly an hour longer, she on her prison-ship, and he on land.
1997 Daily Tel. 27 June 418 The prison ship off the Dorset coast has been closed temporarily after its fire sprinkler system was found to be unsafe.
prison tower n.
ΚΠ
1612 R. Johnson Crowne-Garland Goulden Roses sig. F5 He was bereft of noble power, committed to his charge: And cast into the prison Tower, his torments to enlarge.
1780 J. Howard App. State Prisons Eng. & Wales 79 In a small dungeon is a stone seat like some I have seen in old prison towers.
1835 L. E. Landon Misc. Poems 23 When she left her prison-tower..It was to seek the sea-beat strand.
1993 R. Ash Calypso's Island (BNC) You look like Rapunzel in her high prison tower.
C2. Objective.
prison-bursting adj.
ΚΠ
1797 C. Newton Poems 56 Strong, as prison-bursting wind.
a1849 J. C. Mangan Poems (1859) 455 Prison-bursting Death! Welcome be thy blow!
2000 Weekend Australian (Nexis) 5 Feb. 23 As US attorney for New York's southern district from 1983 to 1989, Giuliani racked up a prison-bursting 4125 convictions.
prison cleaner n.
ΚΠ
1908 N.E.D. at Prison sb. Prison cleaner.
1998 Scotsman (Nexis) 12 Mar. 11 She used the machine in her allocated role as a prison cleaner.
2004 Lincs. Echo (Nexis) 29 Jan. 6 The 21-year-old also works as a prison cleaner.
prison-escaping adj.
ΚΠ
1908 N.E.D. at Prison sb. Prison-escaping.
2001 Rocky Mountain News (Denver) (Nexis) 4 Feb. 7 b How can the word ‘glory’ be used to describe prison-escaping, cop-killing, convicted felons?
prison fancying adj.
ΚΠ
a1845 S. Smith Wks. (1860) 200/1 Right and wrong, innocence and guilt, must not be confounded, that a prison-fancying justice may bring his friend into the prison.
1908 N.E.D. at Prison sb. Prison fancying.
prison-making n.
ΚΠ
1908 N.E.D. at Prison sb. Prison-making.
prison visiting n.
ΘΚΠ
society > authority > punishment > imprisonment > prison > [noun] > visiting time
prison visiting1838
1838 H. Martineau Retrospect of Western Trav. I. 224 I trust that the practice of prison-visiting will gain ground.
1992 She May (BNC) The Howard League is producing an Information Pack..giving advice on..the complexities of prison visiting.
prison visitor n.
ΘΚΠ
society > society and the community > social attitudes > philanthropy > [noun] > visiting for philanthropic purposes > philanthropic visitor
visiterc1384
visitorc1430
visitant1661
prison visitor1837
slummer1887
slum-sister1890
1837 H. Martineau Society in Amer. II. iii. iv. 285 Every prison visitor has been conscious, on first conversing privately with a criminal, of a feeling of surprise at finding him so human.
1997 Church Times 1 Aug. 14/3 Sr Annunciata of the Daughters of Joseph and Mary, a 72-year-old prison visitor who has been doing what she can to help lifers at Kingston Prison in Portsmouth for nearly 30 years.
C3. Instrumental and locative.
prison-born adj.
ΚΠ
1660 T. Fuller Mixt Contempl. i. vii. 12 I lack..many things more, which thou being Prison-born, neither art nor can be sensible of.
1846 A. McLachlan Spirit of Love 14 The captive bird, tho' prison born, Methinks has sadness in its song.
1952 F. E. Halliday Shakespeare Compan. 467 She [sc. the wife of Antigonus]..brings him the prison-born Perdita.
2001 Philadelphia Inquirer (Nexis) 12 Aug. a4 The New York state women's prison in Bedford Hills was the first in the nation, in the early 1900s, to allow female convicts to live with their prison-born children.
prison-caused adj.
ΚΠ
1908 N.E.D. at Prison sb. Prison-caused.
1954 Coshocton (Ohio) Tribune 19 Nov. 1/5 Both..have entered a Budapest hospital for treatment of prison-caused illnesses.
1999 United Press Internat. Newswire (Nexis) 2 Mar. Flat settlements based on their experience in prison-caused violent incidents and their security classification.
prison-flavoured adj.
ΚΠ
1908 N.E.D. at Prison sb. Prison flavoured.
prison-made adj.
ΚΠ
1858 N.Y. Times 5 May 3/3 (advt.) Sale Agent for selling Auburn Power Loom, and Auburn Prison-made three-ply, Ingrain and Venetian Carpets.
1998 R. Anderson et al. New Ghosts, Old Ghosts 16 The next year even saw the establishment of a store specializing in prison-made goods.
prison-taught adj.
ΚΠ
1877 Times 4 Dec. 7/3 It is instructive to consider the result of the compulsory training of stonemasons and artificers as exemplified at a convict establishment now being erected by prison taught labour in the Metropolis.
1998 Business Week (Nexis) 30 Mar. 192 He was a prison-taught bird expert who had to leave his avian companions behind when he was transferred from Leavenworth Prison.
C4.
prison-bird n. a habitual criminal or a long-term prisoner; cf. jail-bird n.
ΘΚΠ
society > authority > punishment > imprisonment > prisoner > [noun] > one who has been long or often in jail
Newgate bird1580
bridewell bird1590
jail-bird1603
prison-birda1640
old hand1826
repeater1873
old lag1910
loser1912
in-and-out boy1937
a1640 P. Massinger City-Madam (1658) i. i. 98 I sent the prison-bird this morning for em.
1899 W. Besant Orange Girl Prol. 15 ‘I venture to ask who you are.’ ‘A prison bird, madam. Nothing more.’
1994 Independent (Nexis) 17 Nov. 26 The boy in question, however, is still attached to his prison-bird natural father.
prison breach n. = prison breaking n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > safety > escape > [noun] > from restraint or confinement > from prison
prison breach1657
spring1900
bust-out1930
1657 W. Prynne Exact Abridgem. Rec. Tower of London 615 Pardon granted. Dover Castle. Prison-breach.
a1734 R. North Examen (1740) 263 An whole Battery of records, being Convictions, Outlawries and Judgements..Pillory, Prison Breach.
1857 J. T. Adams Knight of Golden Melice 432 Let it not be wondered at, that, in consequence of the prison breach, several innocent persons were arrested.
1903 Ld. W. B. Nevill Penal Servitude vi. 63 A most irregular proceeding,..calculated to lead to conspiracy, prison-breach.
2004 Leader-Post (Regina, Sask.) (Nexis) 11 June b1 The Crown also filed an indictment charging Alexson, 34, with assault while threatening to use a weapon, arson, escaping custody, prison breach, [etc.].
prison breaker n. a prisoner who escapes from prison.
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > safety > escape > [noun] > one who escapes > from confinement or the law
fugitive1382
prison breaker1704
evader1754
refugee1754
absentee1803
escapee1875
escapado1881
escapist1934
jackrabbit1980
1704 T. Wood New Inst. Imperial or Civil Law iii. x. 287 Prison Breakers also may be punished extraordinarily according to the discretion of the Judge.
1862 H. Mayhew & J. Binny Criminal Prisons of London 125 A notoriously desperate prison-breaker.
1945 J. M. Thompson French Revol. 217 The queen, in every fibre of her being, was a rebel and a prison-breaker.
2004 Aberdeen Evening Express (Nexis) 21 Apr. 2 One of the most renowned prison breakers was safecracker ‘Gentle’ Johnny Ramensky, who escaped from Peterhead five times in the 1950s.
prison breaking n. an escape from prison; cf. to break prison or jail at break v. 19.
ΚΠ
1710 W. J. Common & Statute Law Eng. Treason 401 For Prison Breaking, and Escapes.
1861 C. Dickens Great Expectations II. ix. 147 He was tried again for prison breaking, and got made a Lifer.
1924 J. B. Cabell Straws & Prayer-bks. 93 That art is a criticism of life, appears a favorite apothegm... Yet the statement is true enough, in the sense that prison-breaking is a criticism of the penitentiary.
2002 Evening News (Edinburgh) (Nexis) 31 Dec. 6 A Crown Office spokeswoman said: ‘A 30-year-old man appeared on petition at Edinburgh Sheriff Court yesterday charged with prison breaking’.
prison camp n. a camp where prisoners of war or political prisoners are kept under guard.
ΘΚΠ
society > authority > punishment > imprisonment > prison > [noun] > place of detention or lock-up
roundhousec1437
cagea1500
stress house1505
lock-up1746
goose-house1841
booby hatch1859
prison camp1865
hold-over1888
booby-hutch1889
charge-house1900
1865 Rep. Comm. U.S. Christian Commission 27 Just on the same principle, our prison camps are to hold secure our prisoners.
1925 Scribner's Mag. Oct. 386/1 The scene is a Turkish prison-camp during the recent war.
1970 D. Brown Bury my Heart at Wounded Knee i. 7 From the prison camps they were started westward to Indian Territory.
2006 Guardian (Nexis) 4 Feb. After being shipped to Scotland he was sent to a prison camp near Braintree, Essex, to work on farms, and has remained in the region ever since.
prison crop n. a very short haircut administered in prison, or one resembling this; cf. crop n. 13.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > attention and judgement > beautification > beautification of the person > beautification of the hair > styles of hair > [noun] > cut or cropped
roundinga1582
stumps1584
stubs1607
trim1608
tonsure1650
committee cut1691
rasure1737
crop1795
county crop1839
flat-top1859
prison cropc1863
clip1889
Dartmoor crop1930
razor cut1940
prison haircut1948
scissor cut1948
cut1951
pudding basin1951
short back and sides1965
c1863 T. Taylor Ticket-of-Leave Man III. 58 Your hair hasn't grown so fast but I can see traces of the prison-crop.
2002 South China Morning Post (Hong Kong) (Nexis) 7 May 2 ‘Long Hair’ Leung Kwok-hung..sports a prison crop as he and fellow activist Koo Sze-yiu shout slogans on being freed from jail.
prison-cropped adj. (of a person) having a very short haircut; (of hair) cut very short.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > attention and judgement > beautification > beautification of the person > beautification of the hair > people with styles of hair > [adjective] > cut or shaved
nottOE
shavenc1330
rounded?a1439
clipped1483
poll-shorn1556
notched1597
nott-pated1598
well-shaved1600
shaveling1607
nott-headed1612
cropped-eared1641
round-headed1641
polled1653
crop-eared1680
lop-eared1798
shaved1837
crop-headed1842
county-cropped1849
cropped1856
colled1877
crop-haired1879
prison-cropped1882
bob-haired1923
bobbed-haired1928
bobbed-hair1953
slap-headed1994
1882 Marion (Ohio) Daily Star 25 May I have no doubt, he is now, though prison-cropped, as smiling and light-hearted a do-nothing as he was here.
1987 Associated Press Newswire (Nexis) 23 Feb. A man gave him a light blue yarmulke to replace the fur hat covering his prison-cropped hair.
prison editor n. (a) an editor (of a newspaper) who takes legal responsibility for what is published and who serves any resulting term of imprisonment (now rare); (b) the editor of a periodical published in a prison.
ΘΚΠ
society > communication > journalism > journalist > editor of journal or newspaper > [noun] > editor taking legal responsibility
prison editor1887
1850 Times 9 Oct. 4/2 We do not mean what somebody has called a go-to-prison-editor, or any contrivance of that obvious description.]
1887 E. L. Parry Life Among Germans 186 A certain man, salaried for the regular position, bears the name of editor, receives the sentence, and takes his term in prison, while the real editor..continues his liberal writing...The people think that a ‘Prison Editor’ (his general name), drawing a fixed salary for ‘sitting his time’, is quite a huge joke.
1931 Ann. Amer. Acad. Polit. & Social Sci. 157 145/2 Ten years' experience as a prison editor brings to mind but a scant dozen men who had the ability to express themselves in such a manner as to make interesting reading.
1942 Soda Springs (Idaho) Sun 16 Apr. In such a case the prison editor goes to jail without interrupting the even tenor of the newspaper.
1984 N.Y. Times (Electronic text) 22 Dec. Governor Refuses to Free Louisiana Prison Editor...Gov. Edwin Edwards refused today to free a prisoner who became an award-winning journalist.
prison fever n. = jail-fever n.
ΚΠ
1749 L. Pilkington Mem. (new ed.) II. 109 He was confined in Newgate,—had taken the Prison-fever, and declared he could not die in Peace, unless he saw me.
1852 B. J. Lossing Pict. Field-bk. Revol. II. 665 The heroic mother..on board a prison-ship, was seized with prison-fever, and died.
1928 M. Morris tr. E. Halévy Growth Philosophic Radicalism 82 Each prison was a school of vice and a centre of contagion where prison fever raged.
2006 Guardian (Nexis) 28 Jan. 12 There he [sc. Henry] caught prison fever and died.
prison-free adj. (a) free from prison; chiefly in †to set (a person) prison-free (obsolete); (b) non-custodial (rare).
ΚΠ
1684 P. Ker Flosculum Poeticum 7 He left his Fathers Court, to visit thee, And Flesh became, to set thee Prison-free.
1828 Lang Johnny Moir in P. Buchan Anc. Ballads & Songs N. Scotl. I. 256 They've ta'en the lady by the hand, And set her prison free.
2004 San Jose Mercury News (Calif.) (Nexis) 2 Aug. 1 Few considers the relatively light, prison-free sentence a godsend.
prison-grey n. and adj. (a) n.grey uniform worn by prisoners; (b) adj.of the grey colour of prison uniform and paint.
ΘΚΠ
the world > matter > colour > named colours > grey or greyness > [adjective] > drab or dingy grey
Quaker-coloured?1757
prison-grey1882
society > authority > punishment > imprisonment > prison > [adjective] > gloomy as prison
prison-grey1882
1882 Times 4 Apr. 5/2 Soukhanoff, dressed in prison gray, with half-a-dozen gendarmes, was taken by special train to Oranienbaum.
1956 ‘H. MacDiarmid’ Stony Limits & Scots Unbound 90 A flash of sun in a country all prison-grey.
1992 Supreme Court Rev. 1991 109 When a ‘jail plant’ in prison grey questions another inmate in a prison.
2003 R. Johnson In Vitro Madonna 502 Dark flaking rust had replaced prison-gray paint, making the area look even more foreboding.
prison haircut n. = prison crop n.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > attention and judgement > beautification > beautification of the person > beautification of the hair > styles of hair > [noun] > cut or cropped
roundinga1582
stumps1584
stubs1607
trim1608
tonsure1650
committee cut1691
rasure1737
crop1795
county crop1839
flat-top1859
prison cropc1863
clip1889
Dartmoor crop1930
razor cut1940
prison haircut1948
scissor cut1948
cut1951
pudding basin1951
short back and sides1965
1948 Times Recorder (Zanesville, Ohio) 11 May 2/7 The men..were given regular prison haircuts when they entered Western penitentiary ten days ago.
2006 Daily Tel. (Nexis) 19 Jan. 7 The pair, who had been given crude prison haircuts since their trial last week, stood barefoot, in leg irons and handcuffs.
prison hole n. a prison cell.
ΚΠ
1604 T. Middleton Ant & Nightingale sig. f3v Meaning indeede to stop some Prison hole with me (as your souldiers when the wars haue done with them, are good for nothing else but to stop holes withall).
1797 T. Holcroft Adventures Hugh Trevor VI. xiv. 165 My attention was called to the iron bars of the one window of my prison hole.
1885 W. Hodge Mem. of Late William Hodge Sen. 86 After the soldier was finally in the prison hole..he applied some bitter epithets to Godfrey.
1998 Scotsman (Nexis) 14 Dec. 19 Send that genocidal right-wing thug to the most brutal electrode-filled prison hole on Earth.
prison-industrial complex n. (a) a correctional facility or unit in which inmates are put to work; (b) (originally and chiefly U.S.) the network of government and private agencies involved in the construction and operation of prison and detention facilities, regarded as a powerful vested interest which profits from high incarceration rates; cf. military-industrial complex n.
ΘΚΠ
society > authority > punishment > imprisonment > prison > [noun] > reformatory prison
workhouse?c1475
house of correction1575
bridewell1583
work-jail1619
correction-housec1625
rasp house1651
bettering house1735
bettering mansion1740
penitentiary house1779
penitentiary1807
work farm1835
farm1857
pen1881
prison-industrial complex1965
1965 M. H. Cooper & R. D. King in P. Halmos Sociol. Stud. in Brit. Penal Services 150 We are to have a prison industrial complex, with an industrialist at the head, organised around specialised workshops with production runs and..competing in both the private and public sectors.
1973 High Point (N. Carolina) Enterprise 6 Dec. 7 c/3 What is cold, hard fact..is that enormous profits are made on prisoners who labor for the state for very little, by the correctional bureaucracy whose numbers grow as their efforts result in less and less achievement, and by the hordes of suppliers for the prison industrial complex.
1988 Salina (Kansas) Jrnl. 13 Mar. 4/1 Hutchinson would get a new 400-bed prison-industrial complex on the grounds of a former mobile home plant.
2008 A. Y. Davis Meaning of Freedom (2012) viii. 148 The prison-industrial complex has become so big and powerful that it works to perpetuate itself... The raw materials are immigrant youth and youth of color throughout the world.
prison industry n. (a) industry or enterprise based on the labour of prisoners; (b) the operation of prisons, esp. as a private enterprise, regarded as an industrial sector.
ΚΠ
1843 Penny Cycl. XXV. 156/2 In India also manual labour is so cheap, and machinery so expensive, that it is improbable that the produce of prison industry will ever be profitable.
1968 Listener 29 Aug. 271/3 Up to 1964, ‘prison industries were little better than a joke—something to keep the men quiet’.
1985 Los Angeles Times 29 Mar. v. 26/1 We have built a prison industry based on concrete walls, guard towers and the overclassification of inmates.
2002 Village Voice (N.Y.) 27 Nov. 55/1 More and more non-citizens are crammed into detention facilities..spurring the prison industry.
prison island n. an island used as a prison (in quot. 1791: the name of an island).
ΚΠ
1791 J. Long Voy. Indian Interpreter 19 The prisoners were left at Fort St. Vielle, or Prison Island, at the foot of the Falls, under a proper guard.
1871 Times 18 Aug. 10/2 Who..have been sent to the hulks at the ports and prison islands between Brest and La Rochelle.
1991 G. Ehrlich Islands, Universe, Home v. 63 That's what the Spanish alcatraz means: pelican. But the name was also a joking reference to the prison island.
prison isle n. = prison island n.
ΚΠ
1814 J. D'Alton Dermid vi. 175 Burst the prison isle to view, Where the good King O'Donoghue Confined dark Maoldun of old.
1939 G. G. Andrews Napoleon in Rev. 85 Almost a hundred years after Napoleon died on his prison isle, the late Frédéric Masson wrote: ‘The idea of Napoleon is not one of those which one takes up and drops at will.’
2004 Sentinel (Stoke-on-Trent) (Nexis) 27 July 17 I suggest she be locked away on a prison isle for 26 years.
prison keeper n. an official in charge of prisoners.
ΘΚΠ
society > authority > punishment > imprisonment > prisoner > [noun] > jailer
jailerc1290
prisonera1325
officer?1387
claviculer1447
javeler?c1450
key turner1606
baston1607
twistkey1617
prison keeper1623
detainer1647
prison officer1649
turnkey1655
imprisoner1656
phylacist1656
cipier1671
wardsman1683
goodman1698
prison guard1722
screw1812
dungeoner1817
dubsman1839
cell-keeper1841
prison warder1854
warder1855
dubs1882
twirl1891
hack1914
correction officer1940
1623 R. Aylett Ioseph iv. 58 God gaue me power my Iailours hands to charme; And sent me in the Prison-Keepers sight.
1768 W. Blackstone Comm. Laws Eng. III. 285 When once the defendant is taken into custody of the marshall, or prison-keeper of this court [of king's bench].
1855 C. Dickens Little Dorrit (1857) i. i. 4 The prison-keeper appeared, carrying..a basket.
1938 F. Tannenbaum Crime & Community 424 A prison keeper called for him after work and took him to his cell, to be locked up while the rest of his friends stayed out in the yard.
2004 Newsday (N.Y.) (Nexis) 18 July (Fanfare section) c11 They want to put everything in a box so they can be the prison keeper, but they get put in the prison themselves.
prison mate n. a fellow prisoner.
ΚΠ
1804 J. Grahame Sabbath 25 The lark, his prison mate, quivers the wing With more than wonted joy.
c1863 T. Taylor in M. R. Booth Eng. Plays of 19th Cent. (1969) II. 107 I passed out at the gate, not..in my prison dress, with my prison mates..but..a free man.
1930 Hispania 13 401 The one trace of humor that escaped Don Ramón's lips while telling of the affair was in reference to his prison mates.
1998 Evening News (Edinb.) (Nexis) 26 Feb. 9 To his prison mates Archie was a swaggering hard man who never let a sliver of emotion through the tough exterior he had built against the world.
prison matron n. U.S. a female prison officer; cf. matron n. 3b.
ΚΠ
1848 Edinb. Rev. Apr. 522 The appointment of prison matrons, or female officers to have the custody of female prisoners.
1914 A. C. McLaughlin & A. B. Hart Cycl. Amer. Govt. III. 62/1 Prison matrons have been found exceedingly useful in caring for children.
2004 Boston Globe (Nexis) 14 May a11 A subsequent investigation found that Norfolk had neither a metal detector to screen visitors for weapons nor a prison matron to search female visitors.
prison sentence n. a judicial sentence committing an offender to prison; a period of time served in prison under such a sentence.
ΘΚΠ
society > authority > punishment > imprisonment > [noun] > sentence or term of
time1790
lagging1819
stretch1821
model1845
birdlime1857
penal1864
prison sentence1867
rap1870
bit1871
spot1895
hard time1896
sleep1911
jolt1912
bird1924
fall1926
beef1928
trick1933
porridge1950
custodial sentence1951
society > law > administration of justice > court proceedings or procedure > judging > sentencing > [noun] > sentence > custodial sentence
prison sentence1867
custodial sentence1951
1867 E. C. Wines & T. W. Dwight Rep. Prisons U.S. & Canada Contents p. xviii Careful revision of the question of prison sentences needed.
1912 Northwestern Reporter 135 243/2 Defendant was persistent in saving his wife from a prison sentence.
1997 Radio Times 7 June (Midlands ed.) 97/4 90 per cent of young law breakers re-offend after a prison sentence.
prison service n. the service responsible for the supervision of people serving time in prison; cf. service n.1 21b.rare in North American use.
ΚΠ
1863 Times 6 June 10/4 Convict Prison Service—The Deputy-Governership of Chatham convict prison has become vacant.]
1868 Times 9 Nov. 13/4 Somerset County Prison... Wanted... Person..to keep books and accounts..and be willing to assist in any duties for the prison service required by the Governor.
1901 Westm. Gaz. 25 July 2/2 The prison service is no longer a refuge for the superannuates of the Army and the Navy.
1959 ‘O. Mills’ Stairway to Murder xvi. 167 The prison service isn't quite like the Army, Colonel Clive.
2005 Hobart (Tasmania) Mercury (Electronic ed.) 18 Feb. Prison Action and Reform president Caroline Dean said she thought it was time for an injection of new blood into the prison service.
prison van n. a secure van for transporting prisoners.
ΘΚΠ
society > authority > punishment > imprisonment > prison > [noun] > prison or police van
prison van1829
Black Maria1835
salad basket1906
society > travel > means of travel > a conveyance > vehicle > cart, carriage, or wagon > [noun] > for taking criminals to prison
prison van1829
van1829
felon's van1842
patrol wagon1873
wagon1890
1829 Times 31 Aug. 4/1 He was conveyed to the gaol along with several other prisoners in the prison van.
1968 J. Lock Lady Policeman xiv. 123 I had already been to Holloway..whilst on prison van duty.
2006 Daily Record (Glasgow) (Nexis) 8 Feb. 13 Why do photographers try to take pictures through the blacked-out windows of prison vans?
prison warder n. = warder n.1 3.
ΘΚΠ
society > authority > punishment > imprisonment > prisoner > [noun] > jailer
jailerc1290
prisonera1325
officer?1387
claviculer1447
javeler?c1450
key turner1606
baston1607
twistkey1617
prison keeper1623
detainer1647
prison officer1649
turnkey1655
imprisoner1656
phylacist1656
cipier1671
wardsman1683
goodman1698
prison guard1722
screw1812
dungeoner1817
dubsman1839
cell-keeper1841
prison warder1854
warder1855
dubs1882
twirl1891
hack1914
correction officer1940
1854 Times 15 Aug. 8/4 Another prisoner..stabbed two of the prison warders, under similar circumstances.
1898 Daily News 22 Mar. 5/2 Wherever there are park-keepers wanted, customs watchers, prison warders, inland revenue, or pensioner messengers, there the retired soldier has his chance.
a1902 S. Butler Way of All Flesh (1903) lxiv. 286 The prison warder..sent for the doctor.
2004 Sunday Mercury (Nexis) 1 Aug. 21 You'd think that, after that, playing a lesbian prison warder in Bad Girls would be a piece of cake.

Derivatives

ˈprison-like adj.
ΘΚΠ
society > authority > punishment > imprisonment > prison > [adjective] > resembling
prison-like1607
jailish1751
1607 C. Lever Queene Elizabeths Teares sig. G2v Thus prepar'd, she iournies to the Court, Where in her chamber prison-like retirde, She liues shut vp from any ones resort.
1795 E. Fenwick Secresy I. x. 180 Here I am already arrived almost within sight of the castle's prison like towers.
1839 E. A. Poe in Burton's Gentleman's Mag. Oct. 206 This prison-like rampart formed the limits of our domain.
1916 D. H. Lawrence Amores 77 The town Glimmers with subtle ghosts Going up and down In a common, prison-like dress.
2004 Detroit Free Press (Nexis) 7 Sept. Despite the facility's prison-like appearance, many of the boys and girls in the mental health wings said they are content, or at least feel safe.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2007; most recently modified version published online June 2022).

prisonv.

Brit. /ˈprɪzn/, U.S. /ˈprɪzn/
Forms: see prison n.
Origin: Formed within English, by conversion. Etymon: prison n.
Etymology: < prison n. Compare post-classical Latin prisonare (from 12th cent. in British sources; also in continental sources), prisionare (12th cent.), Anglo-Norman and Old French prisouner to take prisoner, imprison (first half of the 12th cent. in Anglo-Norman as prisener ), Middle French prisonner to put animals into a pound (1530 in Palsgrave), Old Occitan preizonar to take prisoner, imprison. Compare imprison v.In Middle English prefixed and unprefixed forms of the past participle are attested (see y- prefix).
Now chiefly literary.
1. transitive. To put in a place of confinement, make a prisoner of; to keep in a prison or other place of confinement; to detain in custody; imprison. In quot. ?c1225: to imprison (a person) in the tomb.
ΘΚΠ
society > authority > punishment > imprisonment > imprison [verb (transitive)]
beclosec1000
setc1100
steekc1175
prison?c1225
adightc1275
imprison1297
laya1325
keepc1330
presentc1380
locka1400
throwc1422
commise1480
clapc1530
shop1548
to lay up1565
incarcerate1575
embar1590
immure1598
hole1608
trunk1608
to keep (a person) darka1616
carceir1630
enjaila1631
pocket1631
bridewell1733
bastille1745
cage1805
quod1819
bag1824
carcerate1839
to send down1840
jug1841
slough1848
to send up1852
to put away1859
warehouse1881
roundhouse1889
smug1896
to bang up1950
society > authority > subjection > restraint or restraining > restraint depriving of liberty > confinement > confine [verb (transitive)]
beloukOE
loukOE
sparc1175
pena1200
bepen?c1225
pind?c1225
prison?c1225
spearc1300
stopc1315
restraina1325
aclosec1350
forbara1375
reclosea1382
ward1390
enclose1393
locka1400
reclusea1400
pinc1400
sparc1430
hamperc1440
umbecastc1440
murea1450
penda1450
mew?c1450
to shut inc1460
encharter1484
to shut up1490
bara1500
hedge1549
hema1552
impound1562
strain1566
chamber1568
to lock up1568
coop1570
incarcerate1575
cage1577
mew1581
kennel1582
coop1583
encagea1586
pound1589
imprisonc1595
encloister1596
button1598
immure1598
seclude1598
uplock1600
stow1602
confine1603
jail1604
hearse1608
bail1609
hasp1620
cub1621
secure1621
incarcera1653
fasten1658
to keep up1673
nun1753
mope1765
quarantine1804
peg1824
penfold1851
encoop1867
oubliette1884
jigger1887
corral1890
maroon1904
to bang up1950
to lock down1971
?c1225 (?a1200) Ancrene Riwle (Cleo. C.vi) (1972) 33 Þu sechȝe þiblisfule sune, þet þe gius wenden for to Prisunen [c1230 Corpus Cambr. aþrusmin] In þruch.
c1380 Sir Ferumbras (1879) 3491 (MED) Charlys be-het me þan þat if..y wer prisoned..A sholde delyuery me out of prisoun.
a1387 J. Trevisa tr. R. Higden Polychron. (St. John's Cambr.) (1872) IV. 181 (MED) His felawes were..i-prisoned to her lyves ende.
?a1400 (a1338) R. Mannyng Chron. (Petyt) ii. 101 Sir William Crispyn with þe duke was led, Togider prisoned.
?c1430 (c1400) J. Wyclif Eng. Wks. (1880) 79 Trewe prestis schullen be cursed & prisoned.
?a1475 (?a1425) tr. R. Higden Polychron. (Harl. 2261) (1871) III. 39 Cordeilla the doȝter of kynge Leir,..whom Morganus and Cunedagius prisonede at the laste.
1526 Bible (Tyndale) Acts xxii. 19 I presoned and bett in euery sinagoge them that beleued on the.
?1542 H. Brinkelow Complaynt Roderyck Mors xii. sig. C8 Many tymes thei preson men for their fryndes pleasure.
1608 J. Sylvester tr. G. de S. Du Bartas Deuine Weekes & Wks. (new ed.) ii. iv. 143 Even as a Lion, prisoned in his grate,..Roars hideously.
1657 G. Fox in True Narr. James Nayler 40 To prison them contrary to the Just is to make them to grow.
1794 W. Anderson Piper of Peebles 15 He's prison'd, an' examin'd too.
1814 Ld. Byron Corsair ii. xi. 50 A chief on land—an outlaw on the deep—Destroying—saving—prison'd—and asleep!
1898 Shetland News 2 Apr. 7/3 Dey'll summons, an' prison, an' fine a puir body for shuttin' a corby.
1932 T. E. Lawrence tr. Homer Odyssey iv All this long time you are prisoned in the island and put no term to the delay, though the spirit of your company diminishes.
1994 B. Hambly Crossroad iv. 44 Kirk thought about the thin, green-haired young man..prisoned behind the crystalplex doors.
2. transitive. In extended use: to confine, restrain, restrict the movement of. Cf. imprison v. 1b, 2.
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > difficulty > hindrance > restriction of free action > restrict in free action [verb (transitive)]
bindc1200
hamper?a1366
chain1377
coarctc1400
prison?a1425
tether?a1505
fetter1526
imprisona1533
strait1533
swaddle1539
measure1560
shacklea1568
to tie up1570
manacle1577
straitena1586
hopple1586
immew16..
scant1600
cabina1616
criba1616
trammela1616
copse1617
cramp1625
cloister1627
incarcerate1640
hidebind1642
strait-lace1662
perstringe1679
hough-band1688
cabin1780
pin1795
strait jacket1814
peg1832
befetter1837
to tie the hands of1866
corset1935
society > authority > subjection > restraint or restraining > restriction or limitation > restrict or limit [verb (transitive)] > in free action
bind971
hamper?a1366
chain1377
coarctc1400
prison?a1425
tether?a1505
fetter1526
imprisona1533
strait1533
swaddle1539
measure1560
shacklea1568
to tie up1570
manacle1577
straitena1586
hopple1586
immew16..
scant1600
cabina1616
criba1616
trammela1616
copse1617
cramp1625
cloister1627
incarcerate1640
hidebind1642
to box up1659
strait-lace1662
perstringe1679
hough-band1688
cabin1780
pin1795
strait jacket1814
peg1832
befetter1837
to tie the hands of1866
hog-tie1924
corset1935
?a1425 (a1415) Lanterne of Liȝt (Harl.) (1917) 100 Wiþ þis þei prisoun many a houngry soule.
c1450 C. d'Orleans Poems (1941) 90 (MED) When slepy rest he felith his hert hath take, Prysone his eyen lest that ellis they him move, For if thei goon at large they wol him wake.
1483 ( tr. G. Deguileville Pilgrimage of Soul (Caxton) (1859) 67 Here myght thou see the meschyef of vntrewe counceylle, that made this gentil Lyberalite prisond.
1530 Myroure Oure Ladye (Fawkes) (1873) i. 11 Our soulles ar prysoned in these dedly bodyes.
1594 W. Shakespeare Lucrece sig. E4 His true respect will prison false desire. View more context for this quotation
1633 Bp. J. Hall Plaine Explic. Hard Texts ii. 358 Whose spirits are now fast prisoned in hell.
1742 E. Young Complaint: Night the Third 34 From Winds, and Waves, and central Night, Tho' prison'd there, my Dust too I reclaim.
1847 C. Brontë Jane Eyre III. xi. 273 I arrested his wandering hand, and prisoned it in both mine.
1878 R. Browning Poets Croisic xxv Why prison his career while Christendom Lay open to reward acknowledged worth?
1891 O. Wilde Picture of Dorian Gray xvi. 280 He was prisoned in thought. Memory..was eating his soul away.
1983 F. Warner Moving Reflections I. xii. 30 We live, as Plato taught, our earthly life Inside a fire-lit cave, in which we see Only the shadows of reality, Moving reflections, prisoned in our flesh.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2007; most recently modified version published online March 2022).
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