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  1. The meaning of CAPTIVITY is the state of being captive. How to use captivity in a sentence.

  2. CAPTIVITY definition: 1. the situation in which a person or animal is kept somewhere and is not allowed to leave: 2. the…. Learn more.

  3. Captivity definition: the state or period of being held, imprisoned, enslaved, or confined.. See examples of CAPTIVITY used in a sentence.

  4. noun. /kæpˈtɪvəti/. /kæpˈtɪvəti/. [uncountable] the state of being kept as a prisoner or in a space that you cannot escape from. in captivity He was held in captivity for three years. Wild animals do not always breed well in captivity. The bird had escaped from captivity. Extra Examples.

  5. Captivity is the condition of being trapped or confined. Animals that are kept in zoos are in captivity. A prisoner is in captivity, and a kidnapping victim is also in captivity. If you catch a firefly and keep it in a jar, its life will be one of captivity until you let it go.

  6. a situation in which an animal is kept in a zoo or a person is kept as a prisoner, rather than being free: lion cubs born in captivity.

  7. Captivity is the state of being kept imprisoned or enclosed. The great majority of barn owls are reared in captivity. He was released today after more than two months of captivity. He had been kept in a small room, bound and blindfolded for much of his captivity. Synonyms: confinement, custody, detention, imprisonment More Synonyms of captivity.

  8. Captivity is a 2007 horror film of the "torture porn" subgenre, directed by Roland Joffé, written by Larry Cohen and Joseph Tura, and starring Elisha Cuthbert and Daniel Gillies.

  9. the state of being kept as a prisoner or in a place you cannot escape from He was held in captivity for three years. Wild animals do not always breed well in captivity. The bird had escaped from captivity.

  10. the state or period of being held, imprisoned, enslaved, or confined. Judaism, Religion (cap.) See Babylonian captivity. Latin captīvitās. See captive, - ity. Old French) Middle English captivite (1275–1325. 1. bondage, servitude, slavery, thralldom, subjection; imprisonment, confinement, incarceration. 1. freedom.

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