The word incarcerated means in jail or prison.
The police had to incarcerate him because of his conviction of an armed robbery.
The laws are not being made to incarcerate youth, it is that youth is committing so many illegal acts.
you be your self and never let him think that you are mean or selfish and incarcerate on the inside do u think that a fake would like you if your not who you really are
The terms "imprison," "incarcerate," and "relocate" refer to different actions regarding individuals. "Imprison" and "incarcerate" both involve confining someone, typically due to legal reasons, while "relocate" means to move someone from one place to another without the implication of confinement. In order of severity regarding confinement, it would be "imprison" and "incarcerate" first, followed by "relocate," which does not imply imprisonment.
Intervene, investigate, interview, interrogate, incarcerate
The only thing I can think of is "incarcerate".
Incarcerate means to hold in enclosure, to put in jail. Some synonyms are: Confine, impound, restrain, take away, to cage, to put under lock and key, enclose, envelope, impound.
Incarcerate and detain are both synonyms that can be used for the word imprisoned.
The average cost to incarcerate one person per year in the United States is around $35,000 to $45,000. However, this cost can vary significantly depending on the state and type of facility in which the person is incarcerated.
The verb form of "prison" is "imprison." It means to confine or incarcerate someone in a prison or similar place.
In some fashion, yes. The court can garnish wages, seize property, and incarcerate.
enslave stifle Liberate means to free. So the opposite would be imprison, jail lock up or incarcerate To restrain