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TOEFL BNC: 1307 COCA: 1282

prison

noun
/ˈprɪzn/
/ˈprɪzn/
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  1. [countable, uncountable] a building where people are kept as a punishment for a crime they have committed, or while they are waiting for trial监狱;牢狱;看守所 synonym jail
    • She went to prison for tax evasion.她因逃税入狱。
    • He was sent to prison for five years.他被关押了五年。
    • in prison She is in prison, awaiting trial.她正在拘押候审中。
    • in prison for something Her son is in prison for murder.她的儿子因谋杀入狱。
    • in prison for doing something He served four years in prison for killing a man.他因杀人入狱四年。
    • out of prison He's just out of prison, after ten years inside.他刚出狱,在监狱里呆了十年。
    • When did she get out of prison?她什么时候出狱的?
    • to be released from prison被释放出狱
    • On his release from prison he tried hard to find a decent job.出狱后,他努力寻找一份体面的工作。
    • a maximum-security prison最高度戒备的监狱
    • (US English) a federal/state prison联邦/州监狱
    • a prison sentence/term监禁/刑期
    • a prison cell牢房
    • the prison population (= the total number of prisoners in a country)在押人数
    • (British English) a prison officer典狱官员
    • (North American English) a prison guard监狱看守
    • (British English) Ten prison officers and three inmates needed hospital treatment following the riot.骚乱之后,有十名狱警和三名囚犯需入院治疗。
    see also open prison
    Collocations Criminal justiceCriminal justice刑事审判Breaking the law犯法
    • break/​violate/​obey/​uphold the law违反/违背/遵守/维护法律
    • be investigated/​arrested/​tried for a crime/​a robbery/​fraud因犯罪/抢劫/诈骗而被调查/逮捕/审判
    • be arrested/ (especially North American English) indicted/​convicted on charges of rape/​fraud/(especially US English) felony charges因被控犯强奸罪/诈骗罪/重型罪遭逮捕/起诉/定罪
    • be arrested on suspicion of arson/​robbery/​shoplifting因涉嫌纵火/抢劫/在商店行窃而被逮捕
    • be accused of/​be charged with murder/(especially North American English) homicide/​four counts of fraud被指控犯有谋杀罪/杀人罪/四项诈骗罪
    • face two charges of indecent assault面临两项猥亵罪的指控
    • admit your guilt/​liability/​responsibility (for something)承认(对某事的)罪责/责任
    • deny the allegations/​claims/​charges否认指控
    • confess to a crime坦白罪行
    • grant/​be refused/​be released on/​skip/​jump bail准许/不准保释;交保释金获释;弃保潜逃
    The legal process法律程序
    • stand/​await/​bring somebody to/​come to/​be on trial受审;候审;把某人送交法院审判;开庭审理;受到审判
    • take somebody to/​come to/​settle something out of court把某人告上法庭;被法庭受理;庭外和解某事
    • face/​avoid/​escape prosecution面临/免于/逃脱起诉
    • seek/​retain/​have the right to/​be denied access to legal counsel寻求/聘请/有权聘用/无权聘用律师
    • hold/​conduct/​attend/​adjourn a hearing/​trial开庭;出庭;休庭
    • sit on/​influence/​persuade/​convince the jury担任/影响/说服陪审团
    • sit/​stand/​appear/​be put/​place somebody in the dock坐在/站在/出现在/被送上/将某人送上被告席
    • plead guilty/​not guilty to a crime认罪;不认罪
    • be called to/​enter (British English) the witness box被召唤进入/进入证人席
    • take/​put somebody on the stand/(North American English) the witness stand出庭作证;让某人出庭作证
    • call/​subpoena/​question/​cross-examine a witness传唤/以传票传唤/讯问/盘问证人
    • give/​hear the evidence against/​on behalf of somebody提供/听取对某人不利/有利的证据
    • raise/​withdraw/​overrule an objection提出/撤销/否决异议
    • reach a unanimous/​majority verdict作出一致的/多数人赞同的裁决
    • return/​deliver/​record a verdict of not guilty/​unlawful killing/​accidental death作出/宣布无罪/非法杀人/意外死亡的裁决
    • convict/​acquit the defendant of the crime宣判被告有罪/无罪
    • secure a conviction/​your acquittal获得有罪/无罪判决
    • lodge/​file an appeal提出上诉
    • appeal (against)/challenge/​uphold/​overturn a conviction/​verdict对判决/裁决提出上诉/质疑;维持/撤销判决/裁决
    Sentencing and punishment判刑与惩罚
    • pass sentence on somebody宣布对某人的判决
    • carry/​face/​serve a seven-year/​life sentence会被判处/面临/服七年徒刑/无期徒刑
    • receive/​be given the death penalty被判死刑
    • be sentenced to ten years (in prison/​jail)被判十年(监禁)
    • carry/​impose/​pay a fine (of $3 000)/a penalty (of 14 years imprisonment)会被判处/处以/缴纳(3 000 美元的)罚金/(14 年的)监禁
    • be imprisoned/​jailed for drug possession/​fraud/​murder因持有毒品罪/诈骗罪/谋杀罪被监禁
    • do/​serve time/​ten years服刑;服十年徒刑
    • be sent to/​put somebody in/​be released from jail/​prison被送进监狱;把某人送进监狱;被释放出狱
    • be/​put somebody/​spend X years on death row在/把某人关在死囚牢房;在死囚牢房度过…年
    • be granted/​be denied/​break (your) parole获准假释;假释遭拒;违反假释规定
    Grammar Point schoolschool学校
    • When a school is being referred to as an institution, you do not need to use the:school 指机构时,不需用定冠词 the:
      • When do the children finish school?孩子们什么时候毕业?
      When you are talking about a particular building, the is used:指校舍时要用定冠词 the:
      • I’ll meet you outside the school.我在学校外面等你。
      Prison, jail, court, and church work in the same way:prison、jail、court 和 church 的用法相同:
      • Her husband spent three years in prison.她丈夫坐了三年牢。
    Culture prisonsprisonsBritain's system of justice relies heavily on imprisonment as a form of punishment. Until the late 18th century conditions in prisons such as Newgate were dirty and violent. In the 19th century conditions improved, thanks to the work of reformers like Elizabeth Fry. New prisons were built, in which most prisoners had their own cell (= small room) facing into a large central area. Many of these prisons, such as Pentonville and Strangeways (HM Prison Manchester), still exist today, although Strangeways had to be rebuilt after most of the building was destroyed in riots (= violent protests) in the 1990s.The type of prison in which criminals serve their sentence depends on their category. Category A prisoners are considered dangerous and are held in maximum security closed prisons. Prisoners may be kept in solitary confinement (= alone and without contact with other prisoners) if they are likely to harm others or to be harmed by them. Category B and C prisoners are also held in closed prisons. Category D prisoners are trusted not to escape and are sent to low-security open prisons. Prisoners on remand (= waiting for their trial) should be held in remand centres, but because there is not enough space, many of them are kept in prisons. Young people aged 15–20 are normally sent to young offender institutions, sometimes called youth detention centres or youth custody centres. However, if space is not available young people are sometimes sent to adult prisons. A prison is run by a governor who is responsible to the Ministry of Justice, and the prisoners are guarded by warders. There are also some private prisons in Britain that are managed by private companies. They must follow rules that are set by Her Majesty's Inspectorate of Prisons.There is not enough space available in prisons for the number of people being given custodial sentences (= being sent to prison). In the 1990s there were riots at several prisons because of poor conditions. Cells intended for one person often contain two or three.In the US the federal (= national) and state governments have prisons, sometimes called penitentiaries or correctional facilities. Counties and cities have jails. Federal prisons are minimum, low, medium or high security. All inmates (= prisoners) who can work must do so. People are sent to a prison if their sentence is for several years. If the sentence is a year or less they are sent to jail. Some prisoners on work release are allowed to leave jail during the day to go to a job. Prisoners often spend the last few months of their sentence in a halfway house where they are helped to prepare for life outside prison.In the US people who are waiting for their trial often do not go to prison but instead make bail (= pay money to the court) as a guarantee that they will return for the trial. People sent to prison as punishment rarely serve their full sentence but after some time are released on parole, which means they must report regularly to a government official. It is possible that two people who have committed the same crime may receive different punishments. To stop this happening some states have introduced mandatory sentencing, which means that the punishment for a crime is fixed by law, not decided by a judge.
    Extra Examples
    • the problem of overcrowding in prisons监狱人满为患的问题
    • He was immediately seized and thrown into prison.他很快就被捕入狱。
    • She was told by magistrates she could now face prison (= go to prison).她从地方法官处得知她现在有可能面临监禁。
    • You only escaped prison (= escaped being sent to prison) because of your previous good character.你只是因为以前表现良好才免于监禁。
    • Building new prisons is not going to help lower our incarceration rate.建造新的监狱并不能帮助我们降低监禁率。
    • It is one of several companies running private prisons across Britain.这是英国经营私人监狱的数家公司之一。
    • The police are investigating disturbances at the prison.警察正在调查监狱中发生的骚乱。
    • There have been riots in the prison.这所监狱发生过暴乱。
    • prison guards监狱看守
    Topics Buildingsa2, Crime and punishmenta2
    Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective
    • local
    • federal
    • overcrowded
    verb + prison
    • go to
    • put somebody in
    • send somebody to
    prison + noun
    • sentence
    • term
    • cell
    preposition
    • at a/​the prison
    • in (a/​the) prison
    See full entry
  2. [uncountable] the system of keeping people in prisons监禁;关押;关押制度
    • the prison service/system监狱管理机构/制度
    • The government insists that ‘prison works’ and plans to introduce a tougher sentencing policy for people convicted of violent crime.政府坚持认为 “关押有效”,并计划对暴力犯罪者实行更严厉的判刑政策。
    Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective
    • local
    • federal
    • overcrowded
    verb + prison
    • go to
    • put somebody in
    • send somebody to
    prison + noun
    • sentence
    • term
    • cell
    preposition
    • at a/​the prison
    • in (a/​the) prison
    See full entry
  3. [countable] a place or situation from which somebody cannot escape难以脱身的地方(或处境);牢笼;樊笼
    • His hospital room had become a prison.他的病房变成了牢笼。
  4. Word Originlate Old English, from Old French prisun, from Latin prensio(n-), variant of prehensio(n-) ‘laying hold of’, from the verb prehendere.
TOEFL BNC: 1307 COCA: 1282
prison

noun

ADJECTIVE | VERB + PRISON | PRISON + NOUN | PREPOSITION ADJECTIVElocal地方監獄federal聯邦監獄overcrowded人滿為患的監獄high-security, maximum-security, supermax (NAmE) 戒備森嚴的監獄;戒備措施最嚴格的監獄minimum-security (NAmE) 最低程度設防的監獄closed, open (especially BrE) 封閉式/開放式監獄Open prisons prepare prisoners for life back in the community.開放式監獄使囚犯為重新開始社會生活做好準備。private私設的監獄women's女子監獄debtors' (historical) 關押欠債人的監獄military軍事監獄VERB + PRISONgo to入獄He went to prison for tax evasion.他因逃稅而入獄。put sb in, send sb to, throw sb into把某人投進監獄;把某人關入監獄She was sent to prison for leaking state secrets.她因泄露國家秘密而被捕入獄。He was immediately seized and thrown into prison.他很快就被捕入獄。be discharged from, be released from, come out of, get out of從監獄釋放;出獄When did he get out of prison?他什麼時候出獄的?escape from越獄A dangerous criminal has escaped from a maximum-security prison.一名危險的罪犯從戒備森嚴的監獄逃走了。avoid, escape避免入獄You only escaped prison (= escaped being sent to prison) because of your previous good character.你只是因為以前表現良好才免於監禁。face面臨監禁She was told by magistrates she could now face prison.她從地方法官處得知她現在有可能面臨監禁。build, design建造/設計監獄Building new prisons is not going to help lower our incarceration rate.建造新的監獄並不能幫助我們降低監禁率。operate, run管理/經營監獄It is one of several companies running private prisons across Britain.這是英國經營私人監獄的數家公司之一。PRISON + NOUNsentence, term監禁的判刑;刑期cell, hospital, yard牢房;監獄醫院;監獄的院子conditions監獄條件population監押人數inmate在監人員authorities, chaplain, governor, guard, officer, staff, warden, warder (BrE) 監獄當局;監獄牧師;典獄長;監獄守衞;監獄警官;監獄工作人員;獄吏service, system監獄管理機構;監獄制度reform監獄改革PREPOSITIONat a/the prison在監獄中The police are investigating disturbances at the prison.警察正在調查監獄中發生的騷亂。in (a/the) prison被監禁;在監獄裏How long has her father been in prison?她父親被監禁多長時間了?There have been riots in the prison.這所監獄發生過暴亂。
TOEFL BNC: 1307 COCA: 1282
prison noun
prison (in prison) send sb to prison jail verb
prison

noun

prison ♦︎ jail ♦︎ camp ♦︎ detention centre ♦︎ penitentiary ♦︎ jailhouse ♦︎ correctional facilityThese are all words for a building where people are kept and prevented from leaving. 这些词均表示监狱、看守所。PATTERNS AND COLLOCATIONS 句型和搭配in prison / jailin a prison / jail / camp / detention centre / penitentiary / jailhouse / correctional facilitya local prison / jail / correctional facilitya juvenile prison / jail / detention centre / correctional facilitya women's prison / jail / correctional facilityto go to / be sent to / be released from / get out of prison / jaila prison / jail sentence / term prison [countable, uncountable] a large building or group of buildings where people are kept and prevented from leaving, either as a punishment for a crime they have committed or while they are waiting for trial 监狱;牢狱;看守所He was sent to prison for five years.他被关押了五年。Since 1990, the US prison population (= the total number of prisoners in a country) has almost doubled.自1990年,美国在押人数几乎翻了一番。 (especially BrE) Ten prison officers and three inmates needed hospital treatment following the riot.骚乱之后,十名狱警和三名囚犯须入院治疗。 (NAmE) prison guards监狱看守 see also imprison , send sb to prison jail verb jail (BrE also gaol) dʒeɪl [uncountable, countable] a prison, especially a small or local prison (尤指小型或地方的)监狱He will be freed from jail automatically after serving half the term.他将于刑期服满一半后自动获释。Woman faces jail for animal cruelty (= newspaper headline).一名女子因虐待动物或遭监禁。 see also jail jail verb NOTE 辨析 Prison or jail?In British English there is very little difference between these words. Prison is also used to talk about the system of keeping people in prisons, as well as the building or institution itself. 在英式英语中,这两个词差别极小。prison除了表示监狱建筑或机构,还表示监狱体系the prison service / system监狱部门/体系the jail service/system In the US a prison is usually a place where people are sent for a long time after they have been found guilty of a crime. A jail is usually a place where people are locked up for a short time, especially until it can be decided what should be done with them next. 在美国,prison通常指罪犯被定罪之后长期服刑的地方,jail通常指临时性关押地,尤其是尚未决定接下来如何处置拘留者时He was held overnight at the county jail.他被羁押在县看守所过夜。 Jails are usually smaller than prisons and are usually operated by the local county; prisons are larger and are operated by the state or the US government. However, the terms in prison and in jail are used in exactly the same way. * jail通常比prison规模小,且通常由县级地方政府管理;prison较大,由州政府或美国政府管理。但是in prison和in jail用法完全相同。 camp [countable] (used in compounds 用于复合词) a place where people are kept in huts or tents, especially by a government and often for long periods (尤指政府用作长期安置的)营房,营帐Nearly a year after the disaster, many people are still living in refugee camps.灾难过去近一年了,许多人仍然居住在难民营。He spent the rest of the war in a prison camp.他在战俘营一直待到战争结束。Concentration camps were first used during the Boer War.集中营是在布尔战争期间首次出现的。 deˈtention centre (BrE) (NAmE deˈtention center) [countable] a prison for young people 少年管教所The Juvenile Detention Center is where juveniles are held while awaiting their Juvenile Court hearing.少年管教所是等候少年法庭受理期间少年犯被关押的地方。 penitentiary ˌpenɪˈtenʃəri [countable] (NAmE) a large prison in the US, especially one for people who have committed serious crimes (美国尤用于关押重犯的大型)监狱The execution was carried out at the state penitentiary in Fort Madison.是在麦迪逊堡的州监狱中执行的处决。 jailhouse ˈdʒeɪlhaʊs [countable] (NAmE) a small local prison, especially in the past (尤指过去的)地方小型监狱The jailhouse housed the sheriff and his family as well as the prisoners.这间监狱住着县治安官、他的家人以及囚犯。 Jailhouse is sometimes used as a less formal word for prison in compounds, and in journalism. * jailhouse有时可以代替prison构成复合词,用于不太正式的场合和新闻报道He became something of a jailhouse lawyer (= a prisoner who knows a lot about the law).他差不多成了一名狱中律师。Two prisoners die in jailhouse fire (= newspaper headline).两囚犯死于狱中大火。 corˈrectional facility [countable] (especially NAmE, rather formal) a prison or other institution that is intended to improve people's behaviour, usually by punishing them 监狱;劳改所The court must decide whether the child should be placed in a correctional facility.法庭必须裁定是否应该把这个孩子关进劳改所。

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