Prisoner in a sentence as a noun

"The prisoner falls in love with his chains.

Care about people's approval and you will be their prisoner.

Foucault wrote about the effects of prisoner mindset in society in the 1960-70s.

Last thing I read said they don't feed prisoners and keep them in tiny huts, requiring their relatives to come and feed them.

Every other prisoner had a phone, and everyone had access.

Once you go to the airport, you become a prisoner of the system until they "release you" at your final destination.

France, Italy, Turkey, and Russia have horrendous prisons where in many cases prisoners don't survive their sentences.

The foreign visitor was a human rights lawyer, and he was actually amazed at how humanely the prisoners were housed and treated in that prison.

Minnesota spends more dollars per prisoner but fewer dollars per taxpayer on its prison system than almost any other state.

It's a prisoner's dilemma degenerating into a tragedy of the commons.

A thousand tiny reminders every day that you are already a prisoner and will be for an indefinite period while the lawyers are lawyering.

When prisoners are housed in prisons in rural districts, they count towards that districts population for purposes of calculating representation in state legislature.

I would argue the biggest problem in the American penal system is public policy structuring unrehabilitated prisoners as assets:1a.

The prisoner can petition for parole every year during forvaring, but there is no limit to the possibility of extension, so forvaring effectively allows for life in prison.

"“How can you tell what type of cellphone an inmate uses,” he asked, “based on what’s in his cell?” He let me think for about two seconds before cheerily giving me the answer: you examine the bar of soap on the prisoner’s sink.

This is going to be one of those wonderful games of iterated group prisoner's dilemma, in which one member of a formerly functioning cartel has just publicly announced an intention to always play Defect.

The model shows that the arms race is not only socially wasteful – a prisoner’s dilemma built directly into the market design – but moreover that its cost is ultimately borne by investors via wider spreads and thinner markets.

Prisoner definitions

noun

a person who is confined; especially a prisoner of war

See also: captive