enslave in English

verb
1
make (someone) a slave.
If you have a religion, a belief system or a traditional practice that enslaves people, puts them in servitude and reduces their dignity, then you violate our national constitution.

Use "enslave" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "enslave" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "enslave", or refer to the context using the word "enslave" in the English Dictionary.

1. Enslave... ment

2. Curse of Shadow, then Enslave Demon.

3. Vices are not pleasures but chains that enslave.

4. Beholders have also been known to enslave entire empires

5. Dictators free themselves but they enslave the people.

6. I'd die myself before I'd let anyone enslave your folk ever again.

7. * when shadows long o'er take the day * * and evil doth enslave us *

8. To disarm the people ( is ) the best and most effectual way to enslave them.

9. Tobacco can enslave you, weaken your lungs, and shorten your life.

10. Machines serve us: technology serves us; our habits oppress us, and enslave us.

11. Trussed up in a doily for some chinless miscreant to eternally enslave.

12. They plunder the resources and enslave Chinese miners , who go on resistance continuously.

13. Improved Enslave Demon ( Demonology ) is now a Tier 5 talent up Tier

14. Improved Enslave Demon ( Demonology ) is now a Tier 5 talent, up from Tier

15. The Yasa says that we can enslave only those we conquer in battle.

16. Enslave Demon: The tooltip has been changed to 40 % due to the haste effect change.

17. Agreev wrote: “Emotional abuse is being exerted over you to control you, to enslave you

18. How can anyone say that he is truly free as long as such things continue to enslave him?

19. In the past, blatant Bigotry from dominant societies often led one race of people to enslave another

20. Beslave ( third-person singular simple present beslaves, present participle beslaving, simple past and past participle Beslaved ) ( transitive) To make a slave of; enslave

21. But Harry Truman inherited two great wars, an atom bomb and an ally, Joseph Stalin, about to dishonor his commitments and enslave half of Europe.

22. The town became a centre for the bandeirantes, intrepid explorers who marched into unknown lands in search for gold, diamonds, precious stones, and Indians to enslave.

23. Medieval Bestiary: Anthropophagi features a cannibalistic race of fiends with a voracious hunger for flesh and the means necessary to enslave the living or undead to later gnaw on their bones

24. In the late 21st century, a mad inventor unleashes a horde of killer cyborgs and only an elite team of heroes--the Centurions--stand between a peaceful world and the evil that wishes to enslave it.

25. A United Nations Children’s Fund report says: “Sometimes unaccompanied children are taken into families that physically abuse them, force them to work without remuneration or opportunity for advancement, use them in prostitution or even enslave them.”

26. "The only demand that property recognizes," she wrote in Anarchism and Other Essays, "is its own gluttonous appetite for greater wealth, because wealth means power; the power to subdue, to crush, to exploit, the power to enslave, to outrage, to degrade."

27. The Bezoar was the chief antagonist of the Buffy episode "Bad Eggs" and had plans to enslave the population of Sunnydale so that they could dig it out of its apparent imprisonment deep under the basement of Sunnydale High School.

28. The Antediluvian Epoch: The Age of Great Heroes Section I discloses scriptural documentation for a prehistoric conspiracy conceived to enslave and oppress humankind under a reign of terror under giants, secret societies, and their numinous religions that led to the first apocalypse. …

29. Beslave (third-person singular simple present beslaves, present participle beslaving, simple past and past participle Beslaved) (transitive) To make a slave of; enslave.(transitive) To address as a slave; call (someone) "slave".(transitive) To fill with slaves; pollute with slavery or slavedom.

30. Bondmen forever — Albert Barnes thus explains this: “The permanent provision for servants was not that they were to enslave or employ their brethren, the Hebrews, but that they were to employ foreigners.” In other words, olam, forever, refers not to the persons bought and their children, but to the ordinance.