sentenced

Variant of sentence

sentence definition

sen·tence (sent'ns)

noun

    1. a decision or judgment, as of a court; esp., the determination by a court of the punishment of a convicted person
    2. the punishment itself
  1. Gram. a word or a group of syntactically related words that states, asks, commands, or exclaims something; conventional unit of connected speech or writing, usually containing a subject and a predicate: in writing, a sentence begins with a capital letter and concludes with an end mark (period, question mark, etc.), and in speech a sentence begins following a silence and concludes with any of various final pitches and a terminal juncture
  2. Archaic a short moral saying; maxim
  3. Music period

Etymology: OFr < L sententia, way of thinking, opinion, sentiment, prob. for sentientia < sentiens, prp. of sentire, to feel, sense

transitive verb sentenced -·tenced, sentencing -·tenc·ing

to pronounce judgment or punishment upon (a convicted person); condemn (to a specified punishment)

Related Forms:

  • sentential sen·ten′·tial (sen tens̸həl) adjective

Webster's New World College Dictionary Copyright © 2005 by Wiley Publishing, Inc., Cleveland, Ohio.
Used by arrangement with John Wiley & Sons, Inc.

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