No, "detain" is not a prefix. It is a verb that means to keep someone in official custody, typically for questioning or investigation.
The root word of detain is "tain," which means to hold or grasp.
The prefix for inadequate is in-. The prefix in- means not.
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The prefix for include is in-. This prefix means not.
what prefix does hypothesis have? what prefix does hypothesis have?
I will detain your bike. Police can not detain my car.
I'll detain you no further.
We won't detain you any further. Find a way to detain him until I get there.
The correct spelling of "detain" is D-E-T-A-I-N.
No. Persecute and detain are not antonyms or synonyms.
Im+ is the prefix, making it imprison. That is the verb form of prison, meaning to put someone in a prison. It can also mean to detain someone (which can be in an illegal sense, as in the case of illegal imprisonment or kidnapping).
Please don't detain me, I am already late.
Detain suspects believed to be illegally in the uk take them to police stations.
The root word of detain is "tain," which means to hold or grasp.
The police had enough evidence to detain him for further questioning.
in the judicial/ law enforcement meaning of detain, the antonym is " to release"
Yes, even just a citizen can detain a suspect.