Jailed in a sentence as an adjective

Forget banned, they should be jailed, if not worse.

We're going back to mainframes and jailed devices.

Others, the ones that sold *****, either ended up being junkies, dead, jailed, or just disappeared.

Steve Ballmer should be jailed as an accessory for allowing this.

I mean, would some one like Rhianna be happy to see her fans potentially get fined or even jailed?

Some of Mitutoyo's executives were jailed for this.

The scariest one for me was the one that said, "This idiot should be jailed for life for he potentially could have done.

Indeed, he risks even more of his family getting jailed/hurt in China by revealing this news.

By that logic, all of us should be pre-emptively jailed, because we all have the "potential" to become terrorists.

>Justice Tennent jailed Monks for 18 months, with the last 12 months of the sentence suspended on condition she be of good behaviour for three years.

In the countries where investigative journalism would do most service to the public, putting yourself out there will get you jailed, beaten up or shot.

That's partly why they were out there in the first place, unfit for mainstream society, not wanting to be desk jockeys, just good ol' boys, the desperate, the unwanted, the jailed, standing around in uniforms doing things with their hands.

"""Imagine if there were an alternate dystopian reality where law enforcement was 100% effective, such that any potential law offenders knew they would be immediately identified, apprehended, and jailed.

Jailed definitions

adjective

being in captivity

See also: captive confined imprisoned