lynch
verb /lɪntʃ/
/lɪntʃ/
Verb Forms
present simple I / you / we / they lynch | /lɪntʃ/ /lɪntʃ/ |
he / she / it lynches | /ˈlɪntʃɪz/ /ˈlɪntʃɪz/ |
past simple lynched | /lɪntʃt/ /lɪntʃt/ |
past participle lynched | /lɪntʃt/ /lɪntʃt/ |
-ing form lynching | /ˈlɪntʃɪŋ/ /ˈlɪntʃɪŋ/ |
- lynch somebody if a crowd of people lynch somebody whom they consider guilty of a crime, they capture them, do not allow them to have a trial in court, and kill them illegally, usually by hangingTopics People in societyc2Oxford Collocations DictionaryLynch is used with these nouns as the subject:
- mob
Word Originmid 19th cent.: from Lynch's law, named after Capt. William Lynch, head of a self-constituted judicial tribunal in Virginia c.1780.