0 past simple and past participle of abduct
1 to force someone to go somewhere with you, often using threats or violence:
The company director was abducted from his car by terrorists.
2 to move a part of the body away from the central part of the body or away from another body part:
Quite a few of these were abducted from small towns and villages rather than being volunteers.
It lacked the affective followership of armed movements in other failed states and most of its recruits were abducted.
This is not the case for voiceless plosives, however, and both aspirated and unaspirated voiceless plosives have an abducted glottis throughout oral closure.
The girl also cannot turn around or be compelled to say that she had been abducted.
This move obviates a legal charge from the girl's family that the boy abducted the girl.
Their property was sequestered and the women were abducted.
Their arms are placed in the following position: forearms neutral, 2 elbows flexed to about radians and shoulders slightly abducted and flexed.
In many such cases the girl, under pressure from her family, charges that the boy abducted her.