captivity
/kæpˈtɪvəti/ (bre, ipa) · /kæpˈtɪvəti/ (ame, ipa) · /kap-ˈti-və-tē/ (ame, mw)
captivity — 名詞
1. the condition of being held inside somewhere — for example, a cage, a prison, or
囚禁;圈養
被關起來、無法自由離開的狀態
the condition of being held inside somewhere — for example, a cage, a prison, or a locked room — and not being able to walk out, usually because someone else is forcing you to stay there. Used both for humans (kidnap victims, hostages, prisoners of war) and for animals (those kept in zoos, parks, or research centres).
The two journalists spent eleven months in captivity before the rebels finally released them.
那兩名記者被囚禁了十一個月,叛軍才終於釋放他們。
in captivity for the duration of being held
Many wild tigers do not breed well in captivity, so zoos must work very carefully with each pair.
許多野生老虎在圈養環境下不易繁殖,所以動物園必須非常細心地照顧每一對。
in captivity contrasted with the wild
Mira wrote a quiet, painful book about her years of captivity in a small mountain village.
Mira 寫了一本安靜而沉痛的書,講述她在一個山中小村被囚禁的那幾年。
After three weeks of captivity, the kidnapped banker was found alive in a wooden hut near the border.
在被囚禁三週後,這名遭綁架的銀行家在邊境附近的一間木屋裡被尋獲,仍然活著。
The young elephant was born in captivity and has never seen open grassland or other wild herds.
這頭年幼的大象是在圈養中出生的,從未見過遼闊的草原或其他野生象群。
- imprisonment
formal; specifically tied to legal punishment in a prison.
- confinement
broader; any situation of being closed in, including medical or self-imposed.
- detention
official; being held by police, immigration, or military authority.
文法句型
in captivity
held in captivity
用法筆記
Almost always uncountable and used with 'in' — 'in captivity', 'held in captivity', 'born in captivity', 'released from captivity'. The captor is usually a person, group, or institution (kidnappers, an enemy army, a zoo), not a natural force.