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Definition of ransom verb from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

ransom

verb
 
/ˈrænsəm/
 
/ˈrænsəm/
Verb Forms
present simple I / you / we / they ransom
 
/ˈrænsəm/
 
/ˈrænsəm/
he / she / it ransoms
 
/ˈrænsəmz/
 
/ˈrænsəmz/
past simple ransomed
 
/ˈrænsəmd/
 
/ˈrænsəmd/
past participle ransomed
 
/ˈrænsəmd/
 
/ˈrænsəmd/
-ing form ransoming
 
/ˈrænsəmɪŋ/
 
/ˈrænsəmɪŋ/
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  1. ransom somebody to pay money to somebody so that they will set free the person that they are keeping as a prisoner
    • The kidnapped children were all ransomed and returned home unharmed.
    Topics Crime and punishmentc2
    Word OriginMiddle English: from Old French ransoun (noun), ransouner (verb), from Latin redemptio(n-) ‘ransoming, releasing’, from redimere ‘buy back’, from re- ‘back’ + emere ‘buy’. Early use also occurred in theological contexts expressing ‘deliverance’ and ‘atonement’.
See ransom in the Oxford Advanced American Dictionary
previously
adverb
 
 
From the Word list
Oxford 3000
B1
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