Bible Dictionaries
Prison

King James Dictionary

PRISON, n. priz'n. L. prendo.

1. In a general sense, any place of confinement or involuntary restraint but appropriately, a public building for the confinement or safe custody of debtors and criminals committed by process of law a jail. Originally, a prison, as Lord Coke observes, was only a place of safe custody but it is now employed as a place of punishment. We have state-prisons, for the confinement of criminals by way of punishment.
2. Any place of confinement or restraint.

The tyrant Aeolus,

With power imperial curbs the struggling winds,

And sounding tempests in dark prisons binds.

3. In Scripture, a low, obscure, afflicted condition. Ecclesiastes 4
4. The cave where David was confined. Psalms 142
5. A state of spiritual bondage. Isaiah 42
Bibliography Information
Entry for 'Prison'. King James Dictionary. https://www.studylight.org/​dictionaries/​eng/​kjd/​p/prison.html.