Confinement, custody, imprisonment, impoundment, jail, or incarceration.
Prisoner.
freedom
Free, independent, loose
the adjective is captive - the noun is captivity
No captivity does not have a suffix. If the word captivity hasa suffix it would end in ly ed es s ies
G, bastille, can, clink, confinement, cooler, dungeon, guardhouse, jail, keep, lockup, pen*, penal institution, penitentiary, reformatory, slammer, statesville, stockade, up the river.
The root word of "captive" is "captivus," which comes from the Latin word "captus" meaning "caught" or "taken."
The Tagalog word for captive is "bilanggo."
Incarcerated , jailed , captive, detained, locked up, behind bars
captive
freedom
Yes, the word captive is stressed on the first syllable. (kap-tiv)
Free, independent, loose
A prisoner may be referred to as a captive.
Captive spirit is the English equivalent of 'spiritus captus'. In the word by word translation, the noun 'spiritus' means 'spirit'. The adjective 'captus' means 'captive'.
For he'd held her captive for so long, it was entirely too hard to grasp freeing her.
Martin Luther
Martin Luther