send to the scaffold
Appearance
English
[edit]Verb
[edit]send to the scaffold (third-person singular simple present sends to the scaffold, present participle sending to the scaffold, simple past and past participle sent to the scaffold)
- To sentence to be hanged.
- Synonyms: see Thesaurus:kill by hanging
- 1872, William Russell, William Jones, From the peace of Paris in 1763 to the Treaty of Amiens in 1802:
- The unfortunate widow of Louis XVI. was the first who was sent to the scaffold by the sanguinary tribunal of the revolution.
- 1937, T. Arthur Plummer, The Bonfire Murder, page 348:
- Three men were sent to the scaffold—the Brothers Stanbourn (although a great fight was put up by Richard Stanbourn's counsel) for the slaying of William Jones and (in the case of Joseph Stanbourn) of Arthur Marsh.
- 2018, Loren D. Estleman, The Branch and the Scaffold and Billy Gashade:
- He had seen often the traces of dust on the judge's knees after he had prayed for the souls of the men he had sent to the scaffold.
- To cause someone to be condemned to be hanged.
- 1845, George Newenham Wright, Jules Janin, Eugène Louis Lami, France Illustrated:
- On the other hand, how could the peerage — which had been the support of the now subverted throne, and which, perhaps, had secretly shared its hopes and its delirium — how could it escape public disgrace, if, too obedient to popular malice, a malice which had been accumulating since 1815, it sent to the scaffold the king's ministers, deputies, peers of France, men of their own rank and standard?
- 1896, Albert Ross, Linn Boyd Porter, His Foster Sister, page 97:
- I understand, of course, why you are anxious to get this thing without disagreeable consequences to yourself. You regard it as one of the links in a chain that may some day send you to the scaffold.
- 1972, Raymond Blaine Fosdick, The League and the United Nations After Fifty Years, page 19:
- The Drummonds were an old family who had provided Scotland with two Queens, and had always strongly supported the Stuarts, a loyalty that had sent some of its members into exile and others to the scaffold.