0 to put or keep someone in prison or in a place used as a prison:
Thousands of dissidents have been interrogated or incarcerated.
We were incarcerated in that broken elevator for four hours.
All subjects were incarcerated for violent offences, but had extensive criminal histories for acquisitive offences.
However, more were incarcerated for 'other' offences such as fraud.
Several were incarcerated for drug offences, but in their words, were neither regular users nor drug dependent.
The majority of prisoners are incarcerated for less than 12 months after which they re-enter the community.
During this time period 213 persons were incarcerated in the two prisons, 174 of which participated in the study (response rate 82 %).
State and federal governments revised their criminal codes, effectively abolishing parole, imposing mandatory minimum sentences, and allowing juveniles to be incarcerated in adult prisons.
Most importantly, personal sources reveal the particular experiences of healthy people incarcerated in the quarantine system.
The quarantine system did not provide what was needed for individuals incarcerated on isolated outposts after a long voyage, particularly for those who were healthy.