reformatory Meaning & Definition

  • En [ rɪˈfɔː.mə.tər.i]
  • Us [ rɪˈfɔːr.mə.tɔːr.i]

Meaning of reformatory In English

More Definitions of reformatory

Examples of reformatory

  • In the 1920s we had the setting up of the borstals which were supposed to be a more civilised form of custody than the reformatories.

  • Few of us will agree that it is due to anything more than mere mischief that many of these lads are in reformatories or prisons.

  • One can send boys to reformatories; but, as the minimum period is two years, that would seem far too grave a punishment for this offence.

  • There was a committee appointed last year to report on the salaries and conditions of service of officers in industrial schools and reformatories.

  • The numbers are, for reformatories forty boys and four girls and for industrial schools eighty-one boys and four girls.

  • In the case of certified reformatories half the cost was to be so borne.

  • The children cannot wholly be sheltered from the world as it is, even when we shut them away in reformatories and boarding schools.

  • Our prisons, our reformatories, our remand homes, are filled to overflowing, many prisoners living three in a cell.

More Examples of reformatory

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