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Confinement   /kənfˈaɪnmənt/   Listen
noun
Confinement  n.  
1.
Restraint within limits; imprisonment; any restraint of liberty; seclusion. "The mind hates restraint, and is apt to fancy itself under confinement when the sight is pent up."
2.
Restraint within doors by sickness, esp. that caused by childbirth; lying-in.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Confinement" Quotes from Famous Books



... counted the beats while he looked at his watch. His chief anxiety was now for the action of the heart, which had been weakened by a lifetime of unhealthy living, by food inadequate in quality, even when sufficient in quantity, by confinement within doors, and lack of life-giving sunshine, and by all those many causes which tend to reduce the vitality of ...
— Casa Braccio, Volumes 1 and 2 (of 2) • F. Marion Crawford

... which I procured in response to your request, and the governor's instructions to me for a full inquiry into all the circumstances is that since her confinement Miss Vinsolving has been under constant observation. She has been orderly and obedient and except for slightly melancholic tendencies, which might easily be provoked by the nature of her environment, is quite natural in ...
— Sundry Accounts • Irvin S. Cobb

... children—his beloved brothers and sisters, he said, to whom, although he had never seen them, he requested us to make his salutations.[397] In the evening Ephraim also came to take leave, intending to go south in order to leave his wife there during her confinement. We said to each of them ...
— Journal of Jasper Danckaerts, 1679-1680 • Jasper Danckaerts

... morning, May 27, at dawn, ten soldiers, with an officer at their head, began calling by name eight or ten prisoners at a time from one of our places of confinement, and they were dragged away, God knows where. Utter dejection and despair were depicted on the face of every man, especially on those who had been seized on the barricades or in uniform. That afternoon ...
— France in the Nineteenth Century • Elizabeth Latimer

... very unpleasant being hanged on a dark winter morning; very cold, very friendless, very inhuman. The long trial, the solitude and the confinement, the thoughts of the long sleepless night before, the hangman and the pinioning and the noosing of the rope, are apt to prey on the imagination. Only a very stupid man can take ...
— Four Max Carrados Detective Stories • Ernest Bramah


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