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lockdown
[ lok-doun ]
noun
- the confining of prisoners to their cells, as following a riot or other disturbance:
The prison lockdown continues, more than three weeks after the death of a guard.
- a security measure taken during an emergency to prevent people from leaving or entering a building or other location: The governor implemented a statewide lockdown to slow the spread of the virus—residents may not leave their homes for nonessential activities.
The school remains under lockdown due to police activity in the area.
The governor implemented a statewide lockdown to slow the spread of the virus—residents may not leave their homes for nonessential activities.
The army base was on lockdown after a report of shots fired.
- a freeze or pause:
Banks aren’t lending during this credit lockdown.
lockdown
/ ˈlɒkˌdəʊn /
noun
- a security measure in which those inside a building such as a prison, school, or hospital are required to remain confined in it for a time
many schools remained under lockdown yesterday
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Word History and Origins
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Example Sentences
Hence, I suspect, the panic, the lockdown, the capitulation.
When it hits your city, be ready to lockdown your house and banish outside family members, they seem to suggest.
Police put the school in lockdown and searched the classrooms and lockers, with no result.
But thanks to the security lockdown, the project proved more difficult than the band expected.
How did Noujaim get her cameras into a country in the middle of a military lockdown?
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