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    en·slave
    [inˈslāv, enˈslāv]
    verb
    enslaved (past tense) · enslaved (past participle)
    1. make (someone) a slave:
      "the practice of enslaving prisoners of war eventually died out"
      • cause (someone) to lose their freedom of choice or action:
        "they were enslaved by their need to take drugs"
    Origin
    early 17th century (in the sense ‘make (a person) subject to a superstition, passion, etc.’; formerly also as inslave): from en-, in-(as an intensifier) + slave.
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    Similar and Opposite Words
    verb
    1. make (someone) a slave:
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    3. Enslaved means123:
      • Held involuntarily and forced under threat of violence or death to work without pay for the profit of another.
      • Made a slave; held in slavery or bondage.
      • To force someone to remain in a bad situation.
      • To make a slave of someone.
      • To control someone's actions, thoughts, emotions, or life completely.
      Learn more:
      enslaved 2 of 3 adjective en·​slaved in-ˈslāvd en- 1 : held involuntarily and forced under threat of violence or death to work without pay for the profit of another
      www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/enslaved
      adjective made a slave; held in slavery or bondage: Enslaved people were seen not as people at all but as commodities to be bought, sold, and exploited.
      www.dictionary.com/browse/enslaved
      to force someone to remain in a bad situation : Women in this region were enslaved by poverty. to make a slave of someone: The early settlers enslaved or killed much of the native population. literary to control someone's actions, thoughts, emotions, or life completely: We are increasingly enslaved by technology. Guilt enslaved her.
      dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/enslave
       
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