English to Gujarati Dictionary incarcerate

incarcerate

કેદ
definition
verb
many are incarcerated for property offenses
imprison or confine.
translation of 'incarcerate'
જેલમાં પૂરવું,
કેદ કરવું
example
The agency has expressed interest in renting a facility near Chicago where it can 'incarcerate' immigrant detainees awaiting deportation hearings.
And while it's pretty expensive to incarcerate men, you can expect to spend double the cost to 'incarcerate' women because of the cost of their confinement and also the cost to society of their kids.
Crime is up, and jails, which disproportionately 'incarcerate' blacks, are ‘the biggest industry in several states,’ he says.
Rather, we differ from other nations only in our high propensity to imprison nonviolent offenders and to 'incarcerate' them for long periods.
Some say they were subject to strip searches many days into their 'incarceration' .
He remained undeterred by several 'incarcerations' , but his growing suspicion of authority caused him to move to a place from where he could easily slip out of reach.
Why must poor drug offenders be subjected to public humiliation and 'incarceration' ?
More than 100,000 are 'incarcerated' in labour camps without trial.
The detainees were 'incarcerated' at a midwestern county juvenile detention center.
Women are rarely imprisoned for violent crimes, and much less so than 'incarcerated' men.
Many of the offenders who end up in Limerick prison find themselves in better conditions than they had been prior to being 'incarcerated' .
And, the number of 'incarcerations' since 1970 has increased 30 times compared to the previous five decades.
Police also learned that the brothers had just recently been released from jail where they had been 'incarcerated' for theft.
But prisoners still belong to the society that 'incarcerates' them.
These days politicians of every hue attempt to prove themselves tougher on crime than their opponents, thinking up ever more ingenious means of 'incarcerating' an even greater part of the population.
Serious criminal offenders may be 'incarcerated' in an Australian jail by arrangement.
The regime calls the detention ‘protective custody,’ a euphemism for 'incarcerating' dissidents without trial for an indefinite period.
For the first time in U.S. history, more than one of every 100 adults is in jail or prison, according to a new report documenting America's rank as the world's No. 1 'incarcerator' .
She said Aboriginal people were suffering great injustices in court and too many were being 'incarcerated' .
You can visit Robben Island, too, 7km off the coast, where Nelson Mandela was 'incarcerated' for all those years.
The committee is urging the USA to stop 'incarcerating' children and teenagers along with adults, a practice it says puts them at the mercy of older seasoned inmates.
The Pre-Crime Unit may, in fact, be seizing and 'incarcerating' those who were never going to commit any offenses.
The success rate was not as high as we would have liked but it was significantly cheaper than 'incarcerating' them in prison.
But if the extent of the imposition is more serious like detentions and 'incarcerations' , I think it's entirely unjustified.
The cost of 'incarcerating' a person in jail is $135 per day.
In Florida alone, 10,000 non-violent drug offenders are 'incarcerated' .
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