You were imprisoned for the incorrect grammar in your question.
The unjust ruler tried to imprison all who opposed him.
"The judge ruled that it would be wrong to imprison the defendant."
(to imprison is to confine, incarcerate or jail, or metaphorically to trap, to severely restrict) The new regime sought to imprison all of its political opponents. The closure of the border would imprison the refugees in their makeshift camps for many months.
The present tense of imprisoned is imprison.
hold, arrest, confine, restrain, imprison, intern, take prisoner, hold in custody
The unjust ruler tried to imprison all who opposed him.
"The judge ruled that it would be wrong to imprison the defendant."
I imprisoned the dog for behaving so badly
(to imprison is to confine, incarcerate or jail, or metaphorically to trap, to severely restrict) The new regime sought to imprison all of its political opponents. The closure of the border would imprison the refugees in their makeshift camps for many months.
The prefix of "imprison" is "im-".
The past tense of imprison is imprisoned.
The verb form of "prison" is "imprison."
That is the correct spelling of "imprison" (to lock up or jail).
The present tense of imprisoned is imprison.
To fetter means to imprison in some way, usually with chains around the ankle. An example of a sentence would be: "The prisoner was fettered to the wall of the cell".
To imprison means to put or keep in prison.The criminal was imprisoned immediately, awaiting trial.
Boundary, imprison.