inmate 英 [ˈɪnmeɪt]   美 [ˈɪnˌmet]

inmate

inmate  英 [ˈɪnmeɪt] 美 [ˈɪnˌmet]

n. (尤指)同院病人;同狱犯人;同被(收容所)收容者 

名词复数:inmates 

While an inmate may have a subscription, not every issue makes it through. 尽管囚徒订阅了某种期刊,他/她并不一定能收到每一期刊物。
The inmate takes one more look around as he shuffles out, this time, something catches his eye. 在那个犯人拖着脚步走出牢房时,他又看了一眼房间,这次,他注意到了一件事。

  • An inmate is a person who lives in a specific place, especially someone who's confined there, like a prisoner. You can call yourself an Inmate if you get sent to your room, but usually inmates are behind bars in "the big house."
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  • n. (尤指)同院病人;同狱犯人;同被(收容所)收容者
  • 1. While an inmate may have a subscription, not every issue makes it through.

    尽管囚徒订阅了某种期刊,他/她并不一定能收到每一期刊物。

  • 2. The inmate takes one more look around as he shuffles out, this time, something catches his eye.

    在那个犯人拖着脚步走出牢房时,他又看了一眼房间,这次,他注意到了一件事。

  • 3. Michigan spends an average of $32, 491 per year to house, feed and otherwise take care of a single inmate. That's four and a half times more than the state spends to educate a child.

    将犯人关在监狱费用昂贵,密执根每年平均花在一个犯人身上的住宿、吃饭及其它费用达$32 491,这比该州花在一个孩子上的教育费用还要贵4倍半。

  • inmate (n.) 1580s, "one allowed to live in a house rented by another" (usually for a consideration), from in (adj.) "inside" + mate (n.) "companion." OED suggests the first element is perhaps originally inn. Sense of "one confined to an institution" is first attested 1834.
in·mate / ˈɪnmeɪt ; NAmE ˈɪnmeɪt / noun one of the people living in an institution such as a prison or a mental hospital (监狱或精神病院等处)同住者;同狱犯人;同病房者 inmate inmates in·mate / ˈɪnmeɪt ; NAmE ˈɪnmeɪt /
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