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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
convict
I.verb
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
a court convicts sb (=says that they are guilty)
▪ A New York court convicted her as a tax cheat.
be convicted of conspiracy (=be found guilty of it in a court)
▪ He was convicted of conspiracy to carry out terrorist acts.
be convicted of/on a charge (=be judged to be guilty)
▪ McCorley was convicted on a charge of assault.
convict sb of an offence (=say officially that they are guilty)
▪ The number of women convicted of serious offences is fairly small.
convicted criminal (=someone who has been found guilty of a crime)
▪ a convicted criminal
convicted felons (=criminals who are sent to prison)
▪ By law, convicted felons may not own or use guns.
the jury convicts sb (=says that someone is guilty)
▪ The jury convicted him of two fraud charges.
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADVERB
wrongly
▪ Relatives of the men say they were wrongly convicted, as they had acted in self defence.
▪ Yesterday an appeal court found Nick was wrongly convicted.
▪ Read in studio A police investigation has been launched into claims that two men were wrongly convicted of murder.
▪ If the defendant states he was wrongly convicted, he puts that fact in issue in the civil proceedings.
▪ Colin Oliver never stopped following his favourite team despite being jailed after he was wrongly convicted of manslaughter.
■ NOUN
assault
▪ MacPherson, of Elmstone Gardens, Hemlington, was convicted of assault with intent to rob.
▪ He was arrested and convicted of the assaults.
▪ The police arrested the offender who was tried and convicted of assault.
▪ If he had been convicted under the assault charge he would not have been eligible for early release.
▪ She was convicted of assault and cleared on appeal but was prevented from returning to work.
▪ Davis was arrested weeks later and convicted of second-degree assault.
▪ Paul Mormando and Anthony Miccio were convicted on misdemeanor assault and discrimination charges.
▪ Nineteen-year-old Joseph Powell was convicted of assault and sentenced to three to nine years in prison.
charge
▪ Mr Braswell was convicted in 1983 of charges relating to his vitamin and health supplement business.
▪ If convicted of all charges, both men face 25 years to life in prison.
▪ The judge said that there was insufficient evidence to convict König on the charge of participating in the murders of 1,076 others.
▪ The brothers hope that if verdicts are reached, they will be convicted of lesser manslaughter charges.
▪ Two White House officials were convicted of serious charges and a third got off on a technicality.
▪ If he had been convicted under the assault charge he would not have been eligible for early release.
conspiracy
▪ He was also convicted of conspiracy to obstruct justice and interfering with witnesses.
▪ He said he questioned whether there was enough evidence to convict his client on conspiracy to commit murder.
▪ Mr Gray was convicted last year of conspiracy to supply heroin and ecstasy.
▪ Three have been convicted on fraud or conspiracy charges, including the McDougals and former Arkansas Gov.
▪ If convicted of conspiracy, Odeh and Wadih El-Hage, 40, could get life terms.
▪ Nichols could be sentenced to death if convicted of murder, conspiracy and weapons counts.
corruption
▪ Despite government promises of firm action, no official had to date been convicted of corruption.
▪ Three Customs officers there have been convicted of drug-related corruption since 1994.
count
▪ His wife, Jane, who had been convicted on two counts of extortion and conspiracy, was sentenced to three months.
court
▪ How much more proof does a court needs to convict some one?
▪ That was another thing; if it was Jane Postlethwaite's word against Zoser's, the court would almost certainly convict.
▪ The courts often let those convicted of drunk driving serve their time on weekends.
▪ Under such circumstances, Dalzell believed Kenneff had an unambiguous ethical obligation to take remedial action with the court that convicted Lambert.
▪ The court hearing which convicted both men was told by ex-Swindon manager Lou Macari irregular payments were part of soccer routine.
▪ But a religious court convicted him of using insulting language and ordered the flogging.
▪ Despite his apology, a religious court convicted him of using insulting language.
crime
▪ Table 3.1 below shows the ratio of females to males convicted for certain crimes and makes clear the male domination of criminality.
▪ Years after the bombing, a former Klansman was convicted of the crime.
▪ The nightmare of being wrongly accused and convicted of a crime certainly sends shivers down my spine.
▪ Naturalization Service improperly permitted naturalization of immigrants convicted of serious crimes.
▪ The state executes drug smugglers, murderers, rapists and those convicted of other violent crimes.
▪ All but one had been convicted for violent crimes.
▪ Eight or nine men are convicted of crimes for every single female.
▪ He was convicted of 23 crimes and paroled in 1994.
criminal
▪ Fred Goldman has become public affairs director for a Washington-based organization called Safe Streets, which seeks tougher punishment for convicted criminals.
▪ Florida paroles first-time convicted criminals into the care of the Salvation Army-25, 000 of them at any one time.
▪ The Supreme Court ruled in 1990 that convicted criminals can avoid making restitution by declaring bankruptcy.
defendant
▪ The possibility that Clinton might grant pardons for convicted Whitewater defendants is a non-issue.
drug
▪ Most of those arrested were reported to have been previously convicted of drug and arms trafficking and violent crimes.
▪ If convicted, the alleged drug lord could face several life sentences.
▪ Among the scores of witnesses called to testify was convicted drug smuggler George Morales.
▪ But in 1998 those prisons held 236,800 people convicted on drug charges-57 percent more than had been there in 1990.
felony
▪ The law calls for sentences of 25 years to life for defendants convicted of three felonies.
▪ More sitting senators have been indicted and convicted of felonies than have been elected president.
▪ Immigrants will be deported immediately if they have ever been convicted of any felony.
▪ None of the six defendants were convicted of the original felony charges against them.
▪ Bokin, 54, was first convicted of a felony when he was a 21-year-old engineering student.
fraud
▪ And there is no restriction on candidates, although telemarketing companies say they try to avoid using people convicted for fraud.
▪ McDougal was convicted of Whitewater-related fraud charges last year, along with his former wife and the governor of Arkansas.
▪ Jim Guy Tucker, were convicted on related fraud charges last May.
▪ That one got him convicted of stock fraud and sent to Leavenworth penitentiary for seven years.
▪ Three have been convicted on fraud or conspiracy charges, including the McDougals and former Arkansas Gov.
jury
▪ After a trial lasting seven days and presided over by Judge Rucker, the jury convicted the appellant of the four counts.
▪ No jury will convict either Clinton unless the case Starr erects is so tight that no speck of doubt can penetrate it.
▪ Sir Joh, however, challenging the prosecution to mount a retrial, insisted that no Queensland jury would ever convict him.
▪ In San Jose, a jury convicted Anthony Garcia of shoplifting several pairs of pants from a department store.
▪ A jury in Sacramento convicted Vernon Watts of cocaine possession with intent to distribute but acquitted him of a firearms charge.
▪ A South Carolina jury refused to convict the patrolmen.
man
▪ This shows inhumanity because it is despicable to convict a man of a crime of which you know he is innocent.
▪ Pinochet called the convicted man a patriot.
▪ Civilised society generally only convicts where a man is guilty beyond reasonable doubt.
▪ There are also widespread fears that the convicted men will serve only a few months of their sentences.
▪ The court hearing which convicted both men was told by ex-Swindon manager Lou Macari irregular payments were part of soccer routine.
manslaughter
▪ Only three, who were convicted of manslaughter, were given jail terms-of two to three years.
▪ The brothers hope that if verdicts are reached, they will be convicted of lesser manslaughter charges.
▪ Colin Oliver never stopped following his favourite team despite being jailed after he was wrongly convicted of manslaughter.
▪ If convicted of manslaughter, he could be subject to up to three years in prison.
▪ Lane has been convicted of attempted voluntary manslaughter and is in custody awaiting sentencing next month.
murder
▪ In 1985, four soldiers had been convicted of the murder.
▪ Instead of being convicted of first-degree murder, Mitchell got six years for voluntary manslaughter.
▪ Four people were convicted of these murders in 1983 and executed.
▪ Broadus and Lee face 25 years to life in prison if convicted of first-degree murder and conspiracy charges.
▪ If the jury believes that, should he be convicted of murder?
▪ If convicted of murder and one additional charge, Davis could be sentenced to death.
▪ The two men were convicted of murder.
▪ Martinez was convicted of ordering the murder of rival gang member Richard Serrano at a Montebello auto body shop in November 1998.
murderer
▪ The immorality of capital punishment does not lie in the sympathy level of a particular convicted murderer.
▪ It is time to indict, try and convict the murderers of Feb. 24.
▪ Sometimes, regrettably, though the idea may make us cringe, that voice may be that of a convicted murderer.
▪ That certainly is the case in Harris County, which sentences more convicted murderers to death than any other county.
▪ Another pro bono endeavor involves representing a convicted murderer from Indiana.
▪ President Truman ordered Clark to take every action to apprehend and convict the murderers.
offence
▪ That is, they must convict him of the offence which they think he probably did not commit.
offences
▪ It was later revealed that Mr Argles had employed a boy who had been convicted of offences against young children.
▪ James Forster, 68, of Manfield, near Darlington, was convicted of seven offences at Teesside crown court.
▪ The boy was convicted of 71 offences, including 40 charges of burglary, after absconding from a children's home.
offender
▪ That would put a lighter burden on the prosecution, and improve the chances of convicting an offender.
possession
▪ Anyone convicted of possession, supplying or producing drugs illegally could be imprisoned.
▪ Rubio, now 57, was convicted in 1972 of possession with intent to distribute marijuana.
▪ Police said Bokin has also been repeatedly convicted of theft, possession of stolen property and writing bad checks.
▪ She was convicted in 1995 of possession for sale of methamphetamine and possession of a shotgun.
▪ Thirty years later, he was convicted for possession of cocaine, and he served 25 months in prison.
rape
▪ Tomkinson, of Bishopston, Bristol, was unanimously convicted of both rapes.
▪ Boxing champion Mike Tyson was, of course, convicted in the 1992 rape of a beauty pageant contestant.
▪ Only one man has been convicted of rape, and he has been sentenced to four years in jail.
▪ Tyson was convicted of rape in 1992 and sentenced to six years' imprisonment.
▪ On his admission to a policeman in civilian life no doubt that person would be convicted of rape.
sentence
▪ North and Poindexter, both convicted, received light sentences.
treason
▪ William Joyce had been convicted of treason on the grand scale.
trial
▪ Paton had denied causing Mr Cochrane's death by driving recklessly and speeding, but was convicted after trial.
■ VERB
accuse
▪ The nightmare of being wrongly accused and convicted of a crime certainly sends shivers down my spine.
arrest
▪ A teacher simply trying to control an unruly child gets arrested and convicted.
▪ He was arrested and convicted of the assaults.
▪ Davis was arrested weeks later and convicted of second-degree assault.
try
▪ The police arrested the offender who was tried and convicted of assault.
▪ Under the indictment, Noriega was transported to the United States, tried, convicted and sentenced to 40 years in prison.
▪ It is time to indict, try and convict the murderers of Feb. 24.
▪ The two were tried as adults, convicted of murder and sentenced to 15 years in prison.
▪ If tried and convicted, Broadus could be sentenced to up to three years in prison.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ He was never convicted of anything in this country.
▪ In due course, she was charged with and convicted of obstruction of a police constable in the execution of his duty.
▪ Instead of being convicted of first-degree murder, Mitchell got six years for voluntary manslaughter.
▪ Naturalization Service improperly permitted naturalization of immigrants convicted of serious crimes.
▪ The couple were convicted in December.
II.noun
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADJECTIVE
escaped
▪ They say perhaps it was an escaped convict who got into the house while Joe was out.
▪ We went on to the marshes with the soldiers and found the escaped convicts fighting each other.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ Fifty-two convicts began a hunger strike on November 30th.
▪ Sakhalin was an island where convicts were sent, 700 miles form Khabarovsk.
▪ There was a report on the news about an escaped convict.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ Fujimori has ruled out releasing convicts.
▪ Howard plays a convict conscripted with others to help battle a flood along the banks of the Mississippi in 1927.
▪ She walked through, feeling like a condemned convict.
▪ State law bars convicts from holding offices invested with executive or legislative authority.
▪ These were State enterprises, engineered by the military, and using convict and forced labour.
▪ We were a bunch of convicts, we were.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Convict

Convict \Con"vict\ (k[o^]n"v[i^]kt), n.

  1. A person proved guilty of a crime alleged against him; one legally convicted or sentenced to punishment for some crime.

  2. A criminal sentenced to penal servitude.

    Syn: Malefactor; culprit; felon; criminal.

Convict

Convict \Con*vict"\ (k[o^]n*v[i^]kt"), v. t. [imp. & p. p. Convicted; p. pr. & vb. n. Convicting.]

  1. To prove or find guilty of an offense or crime charged; to pronounce guilty, as by legal decision, or by one's conscience.

    He [Baxter] . . . had been convicted by a jury.
    --Macaulay.

    They which heard it, being convicted by their own conscience, went out one by one.
    --John viii. 9.

  2. To prove or show to be false; to confute; to refute. [Obs.]
    --Sir T. Browne.

  3. To demonstrate by proof or evidence; to prove.

    Imagining that these proofs will convict a testament, to have that in it which other men can nowhere by reading find.
    --Hooker.

  4. To defeat; to doom to destruction. [Obs.]

    A whole armado of convicted sail.
    --Shak.

    Syn: To confute; defect; convince; confound.

Convict

Convict \Con*vict"\ (k[o^]n*v[i^]kt"), p. a. [L. convictus, p. p. of convincere to convict, prove. See Convice.] Proved or found guilty; convicted. [Obs.]
--Shak.

Convict by flight, and rebel to all law.
--Milton.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
convict

mid-14c., from Latin convictus, past participle of convincere "to 'overcome' in argument" (see convince). Replaced Old English verb oferstælan. Related: Convicted; convicting.

convict

late 15c., from convict (v). Slang shortening con is from 1893.

Wiktionary
convict

n. 1 (context legal English) A person convicted of a crime by a judicial body. 2 A person deported to a penal colony. 3 A common name for the sheepshead (Archosargus probatocephalus), owing to its black and stripes. vb. 1 (context transitive English) To find guilty 2 # as a result of legal proceedings, about of a crime 3 # informally, notably in a moral sense; said about both perpetrator and act.

WordNet
convict
  1. n. a person serving a sentence in a jail or prison [syn: con, inmate, jailbird, gaolbird]

  2. a person who has been convicted of a criminal offence

  3. v. find or declare guilty; "The man was convicted of fraud and sentenced" [ant: acquit]

Wikipedia
Convict

A convict is "a person found guilty of a crime and sentenced by a court" or "a person serving a sentence in prison". Convicts are often also known as " prisoners" or "inmates" or by the slang term "con", while a common label for former convicts, especially those recently released from prison, is "ex-con" ("ex-convict"). Persons convicted and sentenced to non-custodial sentences tend not to be described as "convicts".

The legal label of "ex-convict" usually has lifelong implications, such as social stigma and/or reduced opportunities for employment. The federal government of Australia, for instance, will not, in general, employ an ex-convict, while some state and territory governments may limit the time for or before which a former convict may be employed.

Convict (disambiguation)

A convict is an individual who has been found guilty of a crime.

Convict or Convicts or The Convict may also refer to:

  • Convicted felon, one who has been convicted of a felony crime in a court of law
  • convict cichlid, a species of fish

Usage examples of "convict".

The convicted terrorist got up from his bed and approached the bars as the two agents presented Bureau IDs and identified themselves.

Only those convicted by the ecclesiastical courts could be anathematised, while excommunication was a matter of conscience and people could in theory excommunicate themselves.

The second of a Gorka, the father-in-law of an Ardea, he triumphs, the thief who should by rights be a convict!

Other sights were equally impressive, though Gavin made sure they were belowdecks when the Helena passed Gibbet Island, where the dry bones of four convicted pirates rattled in iron cages.

It was essentially what the Baltimore Four had done four years earlier, when all were convicted and Phil Berrigan got six years in prison.

Intensive canvassing of the area around the Biltmore had thus far yielded no verified sightings, the records of convicted sex loonies and registered sex offenders were still being combed, the four drool case confessors were still being held at City Jail awaiting alibi checks, sanity hearings and further questioning.

While there were vacant positions aplenty, none of those advertising for a clerk bookkeeper required a female bookkeeper who was a ticket of leave convict.

Melbourne was a melting pot of the dynamic and hopeless: the pioneers who wanted to carve a future out of the bushland, newly released convicts, dispossessed Aborigines stupefied with rum, government functionaries building a curriculum vitae to take elsewhere, speculators growing rich on credit, and speculators going bankrupt for the lack thereof.

At others I would find him on the campstool, sitting in his gray sleeping suit and with his cropped dark hair like a patient, unmoved convict.

In order to keep the Catholics under further control, an Act against Popish Recusants was passed in 1593 forbidding the convicted gentry from travelling more than five miles from their estates.

I added that if the cavaliere prided himself, against all evidence, upon being a gentleman, he was not at all likely to convict himself of being a ruffian.

In the early summer of 1968 West was arrested for stealing a cheque and using it to buy a record-player for the caravan, and on 10 June 1968 he was convicted at Cheltenham magistrates court on one count of theft and another of obtaining goods by deception.

The difficulty of obtaining Roman Catholic members of juries to convict in Ribband cases, even upon the clearest evidence, greatly impeded the course of justice in Ireland.

The accused, after having been convicted and sentenced to death for murder, filed his petition supported by affidavits of a codefendant, who, after pleading guilty and serving as a witness for the State had received a life sentence.

Farrell knew juries and he knew San Francisco, and you needed a lot more than they had on Levon Copes to convict anybody of murder here.