Penitentiary - definitie. Wat is Penitentiary
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Wat (wie) is Penitentiary - definitie

WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Penitentary; Penitentiaries; Penetentiary; Penatentiary; Penitentiary (film)

penitentiary         
  • Design of a cell at [[ADX Florence]]
  • 1971 riot]] at [[Attica Correctional Facility]]
  • Women in Plymouth, England (Black-eyed Sue and Sweet Poll) mourning their lovers who are soon to be transported to [[Botany Bay]] (1792)
  • A maximum security prison, the [[Clinton Correctional Facility]], in Dannemorra, New York
  • Prisoners picking oakum at [[Coldbath Fields Prison]] in London, c. 1864
  • HMS ''Discovery'']] at [[Deptford]] served as a convict hulk between 1818 and 1834.
  • indefinitely detained]] in [[solitary confinement]] as part of the "[[War on Terror]]" (January 2002). The prisoners are forced to wear goggles and headphones for [[sensory deprivation]] and to prevent them from communicating with other prisoners.
  • Inmate teaching other inmates in [[Kenya]]
  • Inmate in striped uniform and restraints
  • Juvenile prison in Germany
  • Mercer Reformatory]] (Toronto, Canada), which opened in 1874 and was Canada's first dedicated prison for women. The reformatory was closed in 1969 due to an abuse scandal.
  • A minimum security prison in the U.S.
  • url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ayjLuTdVkTYC}}}} (Architectural drawing by [[Willey Reveley]], 1791)
  • Tallinn, Estonia]].
  • The crowded living quarters of [[San Quentin State Prison]] in California, in January 2006. As a result of overcrowding in the [[California state prison system]], the [[United States Supreme Court]] ordered California to reduce its prison population (the second largest in the nation, after [[Texas]]).
  • The main gate of the Kylmäkoski Prison in [[Kylmäkoski]], [[Akaa]], [[Finland]]
  • Russia]] (present-day [[Uzbekistan]]), photographed by [[Sergey Prokudin-Gorsky]] between 1905 and 1915
  • In countries where capital punishment is practiced, such as the United States, some prisons are equipped with a "[[death row]]", where prisoners are held prior to their executions, as well as an execution chamber, where they are put to death under controlled conditions. Pictured here is the [[lethal injection]] room at [[San Quentin Prison]], c. 2010.
  • "Auburn (or Congregate) System"]], where prison cells were placed inside of rectangular buildings that lent themselves more to large-scale [[penal labor]]
  • supermax]] units operating in the [[Federal Bureau of Prisons]].
  • 1694}}.
  • A graph showing the incarceration rate per 100,000 population in the United States. The rapid rise in the rate of imprisonment in the United States came in response to the declaration of a [[War on Drugs]]: nearly half of those incarcerated in the United States are sentenced to prison for violating [[drug prohibition]] laws.
  • A map of incarceration rates by country
  • escaping]].
PLACE IN WHICH PEOPLE LEGALLY ARE PHYSICALLY CONFINED AND USUALLY DEPRIVED OF A RANGE OF PERSONAL FREEDOMS
Gaol; Prisons; Correctional facility; Correctional Institution; Correctional Institute; Jail (American); County jails; Incarcerated; Jails; Jailed; Hoosegow; Prison system; JAIL; Penal system; Detention centers; City jail; County jail; Correctional institution; Penal institution; Penal institutions; Penitentiary system; Zindan; Convict dining hall; Jailhouse; Global incarceration rates; Detention facilities; Jail; Detention facility; Minimum security prison; Minimum security; Medium security; Correctional centre; Correctional institute; Custody level; Gaoled; Prison population rate; Correctional center; Correctional institutions; Administrative security; Prison term; Penal facility; Correctional facilities; Gaols; County Jail; Graybar hotel; Medium security prison; Medium-security; Correction and Detention Facilities; Health care in prisons; Penitentiary; General population (prison); Isolation cell; Segregation unit; Health issues affecting prisoners; Youth incarceration; Economics of the prison industry; History of prisons; History of incarceration; Corr. Facility; County gaol; Prisons and jails; Corrections center; Corrections centre; Correction centre; Correction center; Remand center; Prisons in ancient Greece; Jail facility
n.
1.
Prison, jail, bridewell, workhouse, house of correction.
2.
Penitent, repentant, penance-doer.
Penitentiary         
  • Design of a cell at [[ADX Florence]]
  • 1971 riot]] at [[Attica Correctional Facility]]
  • Women in Plymouth, England (Black-eyed Sue and Sweet Poll) mourning their lovers who are soon to be transported to [[Botany Bay]] (1792)
  • A maximum security prison, the [[Clinton Correctional Facility]], in Dannemorra, New York
  • Prisoners picking oakum at [[Coldbath Fields Prison]] in London, c. 1864
  • HMS ''Discovery'']] at [[Deptford]] served as a convict hulk between 1818 and 1834.
  • indefinitely detained]] in [[solitary confinement]] as part of the "[[War on Terror]]" (January 2002). The prisoners are forced to wear goggles and headphones for [[sensory deprivation]] and to prevent them from communicating with other prisoners.
  • Inmate teaching other inmates in [[Kenya]]
  • Inmate in striped uniform and restraints
  • Juvenile prison in Germany
  • Mercer Reformatory]] (Toronto, Canada), which opened in 1874 and was Canada's first dedicated prison for women. The reformatory was closed in 1969 due to an abuse scandal.
  • A minimum security prison in the U.S.
  • url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ayjLuTdVkTYC}}}} (Architectural drawing by [[Willey Reveley]], 1791)
  • Tallinn, Estonia]].
  • The crowded living quarters of [[San Quentin State Prison]] in California, in January 2006. As a result of overcrowding in the [[California state prison system]], the [[United States Supreme Court]] ordered California to reduce its prison population (the second largest in the nation, after [[Texas]]).
  • The main gate of the Kylmäkoski Prison in [[Kylmäkoski]], [[Akaa]], [[Finland]]
  • Russia]] (present-day [[Uzbekistan]]), photographed by [[Sergey Prokudin-Gorsky]] between 1905 and 1915
  • In countries where capital punishment is practiced, such as the United States, some prisons are equipped with a "[[death row]]", where prisoners are held prior to their executions, as well as an execution chamber, where they are put to death under controlled conditions. Pictured here is the [[lethal injection]] room at [[San Quentin Prison]], c. 2010.
  • "Auburn (or Congregate) System"]], where prison cells were placed inside of rectangular buildings that lent themselves more to large-scale [[penal labor]]
  • supermax]] units operating in the [[Federal Bureau of Prisons]].
  • 1694}}.
  • A graph showing the incarceration rate per 100,000 population in the United States. The rapid rise in the rate of imprisonment in the United States came in response to the declaration of a [[War on Drugs]]: nearly half of those incarcerated in the United States are sentenced to prison for violating [[drug prohibition]] laws.
  • A map of incarceration rates by country
  • escaping]].
PLACE IN WHICH PEOPLE LEGALLY ARE PHYSICALLY CONFINED AND USUALLY DEPRIVED OF A RANGE OF PERSONAL FREEDOMS
Gaol; Prisons; Correctional facility; Correctional Institution; Correctional Institute; Jail (American); County jails; Incarcerated; Jails; Jailed; Hoosegow; Prison system; JAIL; Penal system; Detention centers; City jail; County jail; Correctional institution; Penal institution; Penal institutions; Penitentiary system; Zindan; Convict dining hall; Jailhouse; Global incarceration rates; Detention facilities; Jail; Detention facility; Minimum security prison; Minimum security; Medium security; Correctional centre; Correctional institute; Custody level; Gaoled; Prison population rate; Correctional center; Correctional institutions; Administrative security; Prison term; Penal facility; Correctional facilities; Gaols; County Jail; Graybar hotel; Medium security prison; Medium-security; Correction and Detention Facilities; Health care in prisons; Penitentiary; General population (prison); Isolation cell; Segregation unit; Health issues affecting prisoners; Youth incarceration; Economics of the prison industry; History of prisons; History of incarceration; Corr. Facility; County gaol; Prisons and jails; Corrections center; Corrections centre; Correction centre; Correction center; Remand center; Prisons in ancient Greece; Jail facility
·noun One who does penance.
II. Penitentiary ·adj Used for punishment, discipline, and reformation.
III. Penitentiary ·adj Expressive of penitence; as, a penitentiary letter.
IV. Penitentiary ·noun One who prescribes the rules and measures of penance.
V. Penitentiary ·noun That part of a church to which penitents were admitted.
VI. Penitentiary ·noun A small building in a monastery where penitents confessed.
VII. Penitentiary ·adj Relating to penance, or to the rules and measures of penance.
VIII. Penitentiary ·noun An officer in some dioceses since ·a.d. 1215, vested with power from the bishop to absolve in cases reserved to him.
IX. Penitentiary ·noun A house of correction, in which offenders are confined for punishment, discipline, and reformation, and in which they are generally compelled to labor.
X. Penitentiary ·noun An office of the papal court which examines cases of conscience, confession, absolution from vows, ·etc., and delivers decisions, dispensations, ·etc. Its chief is a cardinal, called the Grand Penitentiary, appointed by the pope.
penitentiary         
  • Design of a cell at [[ADX Florence]]
  • 1971 riot]] at [[Attica Correctional Facility]]
  • Women in Plymouth, England (Black-eyed Sue and Sweet Poll) mourning their lovers who are soon to be transported to [[Botany Bay]] (1792)
  • A maximum security prison, the [[Clinton Correctional Facility]], in Dannemorra, New York
  • Prisoners picking oakum at [[Coldbath Fields Prison]] in London, c. 1864
  • HMS ''Discovery'']] at [[Deptford]] served as a convict hulk between 1818 and 1834.
  • indefinitely detained]] in [[solitary confinement]] as part of the "[[War on Terror]]" (January 2002). The prisoners are forced to wear goggles and headphones for [[sensory deprivation]] and to prevent them from communicating with other prisoners.
  • Inmate teaching other inmates in [[Kenya]]
  • Inmate in striped uniform and restraints
  • Juvenile prison in Germany
  • Mercer Reformatory]] (Toronto, Canada), which opened in 1874 and was Canada's first dedicated prison for women. The reformatory was closed in 1969 due to an abuse scandal.
  • A minimum security prison in the U.S.
  • url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ayjLuTdVkTYC}}}} (Architectural drawing by [[Willey Reveley]], 1791)
  • Tallinn, Estonia]].
  • The crowded living quarters of [[San Quentin State Prison]] in California, in January 2006. As a result of overcrowding in the [[California state prison system]], the [[United States Supreme Court]] ordered California to reduce its prison population (the second largest in the nation, after [[Texas]]).
  • The main gate of the Kylmäkoski Prison in [[Kylmäkoski]], [[Akaa]], [[Finland]]
  • Russia]] (present-day [[Uzbekistan]]), photographed by [[Sergey Prokudin-Gorsky]] between 1905 and 1915
  • In countries where capital punishment is practiced, such as the United States, some prisons are equipped with a "[[death row]]", where prisoners are held prior to their executions, as well as an execution chamber, where they are put to death under controlled conditions. Pictured here is the [[lethal injection]] room at [[San Quentin Prison]], c. 2010.
  • "Auburn (or Congregate) System"]], where prison cells were placed inside of rectangular buildings that lent themselves more to large-scale [[penal labor]]
  • supermax]] units operating in the [[Federal Bureau of Prisons]].
  • 1694}}.
  • A graph showing the incarceration rate per 100,000 population in the United States. The rapid rise in the rate of imprisonment in the United States came in response to the declaration of a [[War on Drugs]]: nearly half of those incarcerated in the United States are sentenced to prison for violating [[drug prohibition]] laws.
  • A map of incarceration rates by country
  • escaping]].
PLACE IN WHICH PEOPLE LEGALLY ARE PHYSICALLY CONFINED AND USUALLY DEPRIVED OF A RANGE OF PERSONAL FREEDOMS
Gaol; Prisons; Correctional facility; Correctional Institution; Correctional Institute; Jail (American); County jails; Incarcerated; Jails; Jailed; Hoosegow; Prison system; JAIL; Penal system; Detention centers; City jail; County jail; Correctional institution; Penal institution; Penal institutions; Penitentiary system; Zindan; Convict dining hall; Jailhouse; Global incarceration rates; Detention facilities; Jail; Detention facility; Minimum security prison; Minimum security; Medium security; Correctional centre; Correctional institute; Custody level; Gaoled; Prison population rate; Correctional center; Correctional institutions; Administrative security; Prison term; Penal facility; Correctional facilities; Gaols; County Jail; Graybar hotel; Medium security prison; Medium-security; Correction and Detention Facilities; Health care in prisons; Penitentiary; General population (prison); Isolation cell; Segregation unit; Health issues affecting prisoners; Youth incarceration; Economics of the prison industry; History of prisons; History of incarceration; Corr. Facility; County gaol; Prisons and jails; Corrections center; Corrections centre; Correction centre; Correction center; Remand center; Prisons in ancient Greece; Jail facility
(penitentiaries)
A penitentiary is a prison. (AM FORMAL)
N-COUNT

Wikipedia

Penitentiary (disambiguation)

Prison or penitentiary, is a correctional facility.

Penitentiary may also refer to:

  • Apostolic Penitentiary, a tribunal of mercy, responsible for issues relating to the forgiveness of sins in the Roman Catholic Church
  • canon penitentiary, a clergyman attached to a major church to serve as a general confessor
  • Penitentiary (1938 film)
  • Penitentiary (1979 film)
  • Penitentiary Point, a cliff in Utah
Voorbeelden uit tekstcorpus voor Penitentiary
1. Simpson stabbed and was stabbed, bludgeoned and was bludgeoned as he moved from penitentiary to penitentiary.
2. It‘s the maximum security penitentiary in Kansas.
3. The sweltering heat inside the Capital Female Penitentiary got hotter, as contestants in the Miss Penitentiary pageant were working overtime using hair dryers.
4. The state penitentiary is also home to a print shop.
5. The second escape came from the North Dakota State Penitentiary.