0 to put or keep someone in prison or in a place used as a prison: --
We were incarcerated in that broken elevator for four hours.
Thousands of dissidents have been interrogated or incarcerated.
I am not sure that he was ever incarcerated in a woman's prison, which would have been grossly unfair on women prisoners.
People are incarcerated solely for having been convicted of criminal activity.
My father was incarcerated by the communist regime.
She was incarcerated by her husband in order to force her to give him her fortune, and after he had attempted to sell her chastity to a friend.
If they really are totally indifferent to the rights of others, there may be grounds for incarcerating them permanently, not as punishment, but merely for protection.
The last two decades have witnessed an epidemic of incarceration - in 2002, more than two million inmates were incarcerated in adult correctional facilities, a 71% increase since 1990 [13].
Her narratives consequently revolve in a kind of dark circle, where the allure of emancipation remains ironically incarcerated within a structural double bind of blasphemy and apostasy.
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.