take slave
English
Verb
take slave (third-person singular simple present takes slave, present participle taking slave, simple past took slave, past participle taken slave)
- To enslave someone; to strip someone of their freedom.
- 1731, Joseph Morgan, chapter IV, in History of Algiers, page 271:
- His Behaviour brings to my Mind that of a certain proud beggarly Spaniard, of the Ausirian Faction, who, being taken Slave by the Algerines, came to our Conful Cole, who had an Order, from his Correspondent at Barcelona, to endeavour to redeem him.
- 1997, John Wood, The Gates of the Elect Kingdom: Poems, →ISBN, page 37:
- Modest Morvith of the golden hair, that lily-browed girl in Enid's shape, made passion catch and glow to flame when in bright leaves once around my neck her white arms went to take me slave to lips I'd not known.
- 2008, William M. Klepper, A Long Story, →ISBN, page 147:
- Then Dawn said, in my head, "And what do you want me to say to our son when he asks what of you? That I stood over your dead body as they took me slave again?"
- 2016 September 6, Matt Wickstrom, “Johnny Conqueroo redefining old-school rock”, in The Kentucky Kernel, archived from the original on 24 June 2019:
- According to Quinn, the name “Johnny Conqueroo” was derived from a folk hero of the same name who was taken slave only to escape and torment his capturers.
Related terms
- take hostage
- take captive
- take prisoner
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