0 past simple and past participle of incarcerate
1 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.
The median number of times participants had been incarcerated was two (range 1-60).
This means that the boy cannot be incarcerated.
Yet, in many other respects the stations seemed ill-equipped and unprepared for the people who were incarcerated there.
One group was composed of incarcerated offenders, convicted for serious violent crimes and undergoing forensic psychiatric examination by court order.
Most of the fifty or so women currently on death row are incarcerated in remote and isolated institutions, hidden from public gaze.
Three per cent (4/153) were undecided, and 6% (10/153) would not be willing to be tested while incarcerated.
In the modern penal system, the body is incarcerated and made the subject of an economy of suspended rights.
Serosampling was performed to determine the disease susceptibility of the incarcerated population.