Imprisonment vs Durance - What's the difference?
imprisonment | durance | Related terms |
A confinement in a place, especially a prison or a jail, as punishment for a crime.
* Spenser
* Blackstone
* (Sir Walter Raleigh)
(obsolete) Duration.
(obsolete) Endurance.
* XIX century , Gerard Manley Hopkins,
(archaic) Imprisonment; forced confinement.
* 1590 , (Edmund Spenser), The Faerie Queene , III.5:
* 1749 , (Henry Fielding), Tom Jones , Folio Society 1973, p. 373:
Imprisonment is a related term of durance.
As nouns the difference between imprisonment and durance
is that imprisonment is a confinement in a place, especially a prison or a jail, as punishment for a crime while durance is (obsolete) duration.imprisonment
English
Alternative forms
* emprisonment (obsolete)Noun
- His sinews waxen weak and raw / Through long imprisonment and hard constraint.
- Every confinement of the person is an imprisonment , whether it be in a common prison, or in a private house, or even by forcibly detaining one in the public streets.
- Oh, by what plots, by what forswearings, betrayings, oppressions, imprisonments , tortures, poisonings, and under what reasons of state and politic subtilty, have these forenamed kings
durance
English
Noun
(-)- O the mind, mind has mountains; cliffs of fall
- Frightful, sheer, no-man-fathomed. Hold them cheap
- May who ne’er hung there. Nor does long our small
- Durance deal with that steep or deep. Here! creep, [...]
- What bootes it him from death to be unbownd, / To be captived in endlesse duraunce / Of sorrow and despeyre without aleggeaunce!
- the parson concurred, saying, the Lord forbid he should be instrumental in committing an innocent person to durance .