The verb form of "prison" is "imprison." It means to confine or incarcerate someone in a prison or similar place.
The verb form of "prison" is "imprison."
The word "convict" can function as both a noun and a verb. As a noun, it refers to a person found guilty of a crime. As a verb, it means to declare someone guilty of a crime.
The word "prison" in French is feminine. It is "la prison".
The past tense of "prison" is "imprisoned."
Coldingley Prison, or HM Prison Coldingley, was opened in 1969 as a Category C men's prison in Woking, Surrey, England.
The verb form of "prison" is "imprison."
Imprison is the verb.
The word jail is already a noun. It can also be a verb.
The state of being in a prison is "imprisoned". (Verb : to imprison, to place in prison, to jail)
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).
The word "convict" can function as both a noun and a verb. As a noun, it refers to a person found guilty of a crime. As a verb, it means to declare someone guilty of a crime.
Escape is both a verb and a noun. Examples: As a verb: The plan is to escape before the boring lecture. As a noun: A daring prison escape was the headline for the day. It can also be an adjective: Houdini was a famous escape artist. I have an escape clause in my contract.
The verb of rotten is rot.Other verbs are rots, rotting and rotted.Some example sentences are:"The apple starts to rot"."He rots in the prison"."All this food is rotting away"."The corpse has rotted".
Yes, the word 'stealing' is a verb, the present participle, present tense of the verb to 'steal'.The present participle of the verb also functions as an adjective and a gerund (a verbal noun).Examples:The fraud was stealing their money with a smile on his face. (verb)She caught him stealing in at three in the morning. (verb)He got a stiff prison sentence, his stealing days are over. (adjective)Stealing comes in many forms and some aren't easily recognized. (noun, subject of the sentence)
Yes, "freed" is a word. It is the past tense and past participle of the verb "free," which means to release from captivity or confinement.
"At prison " would be OK if you are visiting. If you are incarcerated you are definitely IN prison.
a prison gang is a gangster made inside the prison by the prisoner in that particular prison