What's the difference between immure and incarcerate?

Immure


Definition:

  • (v. t.) To wall around; to surround with walls.
  • (v. t.) To inclose whithin walls, or as within walls; hence, to shut up; to imprison; to incarcerate.
  • (n.) A wall; an inclosure.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Capillaries and cells were "immured" with fibrillary substance which was produced by the tumour cells themselves.
  • (2) At the same time, the Observer believes Mr Cameron's renowned lack of attention to detail, and a casual disregard for consequences (perhaps his wealth has immured him from the habit), means that the very values that the big society is intended to inculcate and cherish are being rapidly undermined, widening inequality and accelerating social injustice.
  • (3) It is literally an immuring within prison walls – on the grounds, not of credible public danger, but of imputed morality, or revenge (“a just desert”).
  • (4) The locally ill-defined tumor in the fatty tissue of the renal pelvis immured small arteries and veins as well as an interlobar artery, and caused damage to the vascular walls accompanied by the development of aneurysm, perforation and fistulation into the renal pelvis, by mechanisms open to various pathogenetic interpretations.
  • (5) For the cases when granulation does not lead to the formation of a membrane or when the membrane growth is too slow, the present author developed a method of immuring a foreign body - a silk thread - into the granulation layer for as long as 6 to 8 days.
  • (6) Nevertheless, progressing fibrosis has a considerable influence on cell shape as the surrounded cell complexes are quasi immured, and their supply and transport procedures impaired.
  • (7) Almost all of his work was painted for king and court and stayed exactly where it was made, long after his death in 1660, immured in the Spanish royal palaces.
  • (8) After the sprays become immured in dentine matrix, the stems are removed.
  • (9) The much-doubted goalkeeper Paul Robinson then organised a defensive wall before, in effect, leaving himself immured by standing unsighted directly behind it.
  • (10) (c) The recent integrative position in which instead of the systems' self-immured isolation or the nonspecifics' paralyzing equivalence of all therapies, a synthesis of specific approaches within a larger nonspecific theory or practical strategy is attempted.

Incarcerate


Definition:

  • (v. t.) To imprison; to confine in a jail or prison.
  • (v. t.) To confine; to shut up or inclose; to hem in.
  • (a.) Imprisoned.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) We based our approach on the anteroposterior location of the incarceration site and the amount of retina incarcerated into the wound.
  • (2) She said it was impossible to attribute the increase in Indigenous women’s incarceration rates to one specific factor, but law and order policies of federal and state governments should be examined.
  • (3) Some prominent US militia leaders are distancing themselves from the armed occupation, which is a protest against Monday’s incarceration of two local ranchers, father and son Dwight and Steven Hammond.
  • (4) We are saying enough is enough.” Hundreds of protesters appeared to have joined the march, carrying banners that said “adalet” or “justice” as they set out on the 280 mile (450km) trek that will take them to Maltepe prison, where Enis Berberoğlu has been incarcerated.
  • (5) The central hypothesis of our study, then, was that psychotic men, charged with misdemeanor offenses, would be incarcerated for significantly longer periods of time, prior to trial, than their nonpsychotic fellows.
  • (6) If correctional institutions constrain inmates' access to social benefits, means exist to protect incarcerated people's rights in health studies.
  • (7) In the last 8 years 15 cases of Meckel's diverticulum were observed, 6 of them with complications: three times inflammation (with two perforations), each once invagination, incarceration and occult bleeding from carcinoids.
  • (8) The gray scale ultrasonic findings in a case of incarcerated Spigelian hernia are presented.
  • (9) A similar observation was made when there was an incarceration of the vitreous to the surgical wound.
  • (10) Often incarceration masks the environmental stimuli, resulting in not only early release but a false clinical prognosis for success.
  • (11) When we compared ARD in patients whose cataract extractions had been complicated by vitreous incarceration with those ARDs following uncomplicated cataract surgery, we found that the characteristics of the detachments were very similar.
  • (12) It was hypothesized that incarcerated adolescents would have significantly higher levels of isolation, normlessness, powerlessness, and total alienation than would nonincarcerated adolescents.
  • (13) For these offenses, SST was as acceptable as aversive treatments and incarceration.
  • (14) The tumor was 5 cm in length and incarcerated into the stomach with an elongated stalk at operation.
  • (15) This is a well recognised complication of indirect inguinal hernia and a common complication of incarceration.
  • (16) I’m not going to put a deadline on it,” he said last week of her incarceration.
  • (17) Changing Rooms and Ground Force – market- leaders in the home make-over genre that was the telly sensation in the decade before incarceration game-shows – ran from 1996 to 2004 and 1997 to 2005 respectively.
  • (18) The risk of rare cases of incarcerated diaphragmatic hernia should be considered after proximal gastric resection.
  • (19) Most patients require resection of the incarcerated bowel.
  • (20) Limited opportunities for exercising self-control while incarcerated may encourage helplessness.