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Перевод: imprison
[глагол] заключать в тюрьму; сажать в тюрьму; лишать свободы
Тезаурус:
- It was an almost perfect system, for it implied that if Israel wished to dismantle the women's committees it would have to imprison the entire membership.
- In 1413 and again in 1460 the Chancellor of the University was ordered, "under pain of the King's wrath and of forfeiting the liberties and privileges of the University", to issue a proclamation forbidding these practices, and to "arrest any man under his rule offending in that behalf and imprison them until he shall have special order of the King for their deliverance".
- But the Forest officers continued to attach and imprison men for Forest offences within these districts, and to take money from them for their deliverance from gaol, often compelling reluctant juries to make presentments against their will, and obtaining indictments in other irregular ways.
- In Russia, people have had to build mikvas secretly, some of them have built a hidden one t-n their home, and have had to live constantly with the fear of being discovered by the KGB who would imprison them because of it.
- If noise is where language ceases, then to describe it is to imprison it again with adjectives.
- In many of these countries the new respect for human rights was embodied in the repeal or revision of laws used to imprison prisoners of conscience.
- Having failed to seduce Joseph, she persuaded her husband, captain of Pharaoh's guard, to imprison him (Gen. 39).
- He even went so far as to imprison Rodrigo's wife Ximena, and his children; and though he soon released them he refused to listen to El Cid's demand to settle his innocence by right of combat.
- (The Children Act 1989 has abolished a rarely used power in section 40(1) of the Education Act 1944 to imprison the parent for up to one month.)
- King Edward's unpopularity was not enhanced by close relatives being created Earls, so Isabella went to Paris in 1325 to consult with her brother, by then King of France, and with the help of the Earl of March, troops were sent from France to round up the royal favourites for execution, and to depose and imprison Edward II, who was murdered by one of the Earl of March's agents in September 1327.
- "We hereby solemnly declare that we shall use no forcible means to apprehend, confine, or imprison any person assistant whatever who has appeared at Castle Menzies or elsewhere, or in any part of Perth on prior days.
- To oblige them to belong to a national group was as likely to imprison them in an identity from which they wanted to escape as to liberate them.
- Sadly, one thing has not changed in 30 years: certain governments of the world still falsely imprison, torture and execute their citizens, regardless of internationally agreed standards that expressly forbid such abuses.
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