kidnap

kidnap
kid·nap /'kid-ˌnap/ vt kid·napped or kid·naped /-ˌnapt/, kid·nap·ping, or, kid·nap·ing, /-ˌna-piŋ/ [probably back-formation from kidnapper, from kid child + obsolete napper thief]: to seize and confine or carry away by force or fraud and often with a demand for ransom
kid·nap·per or kid·nap·er /-ˌna-pər/ n

Merriam-Webster’s Dictionary of Law. . 1996.

kidnap
I verb abduct, bear off, capture, carry off, convey away, ensnare, hold for ransom, impress, put under duress, run away with, run off with, seize, shanghai, snatch, spirit away, steal away, take away, take by force, unlawfully seize, waylay associated concepts: false imprisonment foreign phrases:
- A piratis aut latronibus captl liberi permanent — Persons captured by pirates or robbers remain free
II index abduct, carry away

Burton's Legal Thesaurus. . 2006


kidnap
v.
To unlawfully and forcibly take and carry away a person.
n.
kidnapping

The Essential Law Dictionary. — Sphinx Publishing, An imprint of Sourcebooks, Inc. . 2008.

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Synonyms:

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Kidnap — Pays d’origine Blois,  France Genre musical Punk rock Années d activité 1978 1991 …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Kidnap — Kid nap (k[i^]d n[a^]p ), v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Kidnaped} (k[i^]d n[a^]pt ) or {Kidnapped}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Kidnaping} or {Kidnapping}.] [Kid a child + Prov. E. nap to seize, to grasp. Cf. {Knab}, {Knap}, {Nab}.] To take (any one) by force or… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • kidnap — (v.) 1680s, compound of KID (Cf. kid) (n.) child and nap snatch away, variant of NAB (Cf. nab); originally steal children to provide servants and laborers in the American colonies. Related: Kidnapped; kidnapping …   Etymology dictionary

  • kidnap — *abduct …   New Dictionary of Synonyms

  • kidnap — has inflected forms kidnapped, kidnapping in BrE; in AmE the forms kidnaped, kidnaping are also used …   Modern English usage

  • kidnap — [v] abduct; hold for ransom body snatch*, bundle off, capture, carry away, carry off, coax, decoy, entice, grab, hijack, impress, inveigh, lay hands on, lure, make off with*, pirate, remove, run away with, seduce, seize, shanghai*, skyjack,… …   New thesaurus

  • kidnap — ► VERB (kidnapped, kidnapping; US also kidnaped, kidnaping) ▪ abduct and hold (someone) captive, typically to obtain a ransom. ► NOUN ▪ an instance of kidnapping. DERIVATIVES kidnapper noun …   English terms dictionary

  • kidnap — [kid′nap΄] vt. kidnapped or kidnaped, kidnapping or kidnaping [ KID, n. 5 + dial. nap: see NAB] 1. to steal (a child) 2. to seize and hold or carry off (a person) against that person s will, by force or fraud, often for ransom kidnapper n …   English World dictionary

  • kidnap — [[t]kɪ̱dnæp[/t]] kidnaps, kidnapping, kidnapped (in AM, also use kidnaped, kidnaping) 1) VERB To kidnap someone is to take them away illegally and by force, and usually to hold them prisoner in order to demand something from their family,… …   English dictionary

  • kidnap — I UK [ˈkɪdnæp] / US [ˈkɪdˌnæp] verb [transitive] Word forms kidnap : present tense I/you/we/they kidnap he/she/it kidnaps present participle kidnapping past tense kidnapped past participle kidnapped * to illegally take someone away and make them… …   English dictionary

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