Imprison

//ɪmˈpɹɪzən//

"Imprison" in a Sentence (13 examples)

Tyrannical governments frequently imprison their political opponents.

"Your Majesty, Ganon and his minions have seized your prison!" "Hmm... Fari!" "Yes!" "Imprison Duke Onkled in your house!"

You can chain me, you can torture me, you can even destroy this body, but you will never imprison my mind.

Today, a nation ringed by walls would only imprison itself.

If the army in white uniform cannot imprison the king in black uniform, nor the army in black uniform can imprison the king in white uniform, the game ends without a winner. It's a tie.

The target of both armies is to imprison the opponent's king.

There is no prison to imprison our thoughts.

If they find out where Ziri is, they'll imprison him again.

In Washington, Attorney General Ashcroft said the government is determined to prosecute and imprison those who would dupe charitable donors to finance violence overseas.

Bodies imprison souls.

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One of the village's most notable sons was Thomas Grantham, a Baptist church leader born in 1634, who was persecuted and imprisoned in the struggle for nonconformist beliefs during the reign of Charles II.

None of these people has ever had what they really wanted, and if they get a glimmer of it, they back off suspiciously, failures of imagination helping to imprison them further.

[...] demand for the boots fell sharply after the Battle of Waterloo, and Brunel was imprisoned for debt in 1821.

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