Imprisoned in a sentence as an adjective

The doctors and nurses involved should flat out be imprisoned for rape.

As we've seen from recent cases, he could be prosecuted and imprisoned even if Google declined to press charges.

Western world is not "equally unjust" as nobody is imprisoned for 2 years for protesting the head of state.

The usa offers asylum to people yet has the largest fraction of the population imprisoned in the world.

This reminds me of violent criminals who 'find faith' while imprisoned, except in this case the criminal isn't even behind bars.

I'm trying to compile a list of hackers and hacktivists that have been imprisoned in order to let the internet easily send them correspondence.

Along the way, people I know, including the father of one my children's godparents, were imprisoned for leading peaceful protests urging free and fair elections and a stop to censorship.

The press is not "ignoring" any of the issues you raised - Wikileaks revelations, Gitmo prisoners and other events are extensively discussed in the press and nobody is being imprisoned for doing so.

Son says there's only 30 million euros left.- Call to order the judges to be fixed, and says that a specific person is to be imprisoned.- Trying to manipulate who goes on the supreme court.- Says "ignore the prosecutor who's running the corruption investigations".

And by "free" we specifically ignore "can be imprisoned indefinitely for belonging to the wrong religion", and "police officers can arrest and sentence you to a year in prison without the involvement of a court or even a prosecutor".Every time someone says something like "China is [or will soon be] freer than the US", what they're really saying is "I don't read, but I'm happy to divide the whole world into two sides: whoever supports my current biases, and whoever doesn't".

Imprisoned definitions

adjective

being in captivity

See also: captive confined jailed