Definition of imprisoned in English:
imprisoned
adjectiveɪmˈprɪzndimˈpriz(ə)nd
Kept in prison: captive.
Example sentencesExamples
- On the other hand, you can recruit new members or release some imprisoned people.
- An imprisoned drug kingpin offers the huge cash reward of $100 million to anyone that can break him out of police custody.
- It was only two years later that under public pressure, the regime was forced to try the imprisoned communists.
- Throughout the whole insurrection not asingle imprisoned Communist was shot.
- Their demands: they want an imprisoned drug lord set free.
- He bought them from a gallery on Robben Island, where Nelson Mandela was for so long imprisoned.
- Key leaders of the party that won the overwhelming majority of the vote remain imprisoned without charges.
- With a rough voice, Cash sang about the poor and the imprisoned.
- The judge's calls for the judiciary to investigate allegations against the imprisoned officials fell on deaf ears.
- Claire's parents reacted by becoming extremely overprotective, to the point that Claire felt imprisoned.
- They took this to an imprisoned renegade (traitor) who was always kind to the Christians and whom they felt they could trust.
- But even so, it has changed the lives of a growing number of imprisoned inmates.
- They could talk about five minutes to some of the imprisoned.
- If any minister had reason to be pessimistic, it was the imprisoned Paul.
- The city's current mob boss keeps a much lower profile than his imprisoned predecessor.
- The stepfather of an imprisoned 17-year-old boy takes us up to his tiny apartment to meet his wife.
- Joan Baez could be in the song, Earle said, for singing "Joe Hill" at Woodstock for her imprisoned husband, who was in jail to shut him up.
- She holds the letter she wrote to him demanding hospital treatment for her imprisoned husband.