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		Grammar and Linguistics > inmate or convict?     
			
		 inmate or convict? 
		
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 binabo
 
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							| inmate or convict? 
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							| Hi!
Could you please tell me which is the difference between these 2 words? inmate and convict could be synonyms?
thanks in advance for your help!
S.B. |  24 Sep 2013      
					
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 ueslteacher
 
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							| The way I see it, they are inmates to each other and they �re convicts to all the rest of us:) 
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 aliciapc
 
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							| For me :  Convict - only in prison.  Inmate - prison, mental hospital, other institution |  24 Sep 2013     
					
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 edrodmedina
 
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							| It �s a British English thing. It �s the answer a friend gives when asked: Are you going out or staying in? Inmate.  Ed |  24 Sep 2013     
					
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 yanogator
 
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							| Ed, go to your room!   Bruce |  24 Sep 2013     
					
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 Jayho
 
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							| Actually, Ed is right, I think.   In my neck of the woods we use the word inmate, usually a prison inmate.   Convict as a noun is not current usage. To us, a convict is a word used in history for the English prisoners that came out to the Australian penal colony in the early 1800s.   But, convict as a verb, is current. |  24 Sep 2013     
					
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 douglas
 
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							|   Technically, prisoner, imate and convict are all synonyms (prisoner can have a few other meanings though)   In the USA, it is quite common to hear "he �s an ex-con" ("con" being short for convict).    Here is an interesting take on the two terms ("inmate" is offensive to "convicts"):     |  25 Sep 2013     
					
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 binabo
 
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							| Thanks a lot for your help!
Have a nice day! |  25 Sep 2013     
					
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