Jail & Prison

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JustAlilBit

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Hello teachers, Please explain this to me. What is the differences between these words? or Is there any differences between these words? I don't know which one of these questions sound better. Prison and Jail.
 
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They're pretty much the same. When you say "jail", though, I tend to associate it with minor offenses.
 
Although the terms “jail” and “prison” are sometimes used interchangeably, most members of law enforcement distinguish between the two.
Primarily, the difference is that a jail is used by local jurisdictions such as counties and cities to confine people for short periods of time. A prison, or penitentiary, is administered by the state, and is used to house convicted criminals for periods of much longer duration.
 
Just out of interest, you might like to know that 'jail' is the (now almost universally used) American spelling of a word that used, in Britain, to be spelled 'gaol'.
 
There are certain phrases which always use one but not the other.

Jailbird = a prisoner/ex-prisoner (also someone who has been in and out of prison several times).
Jailbait = a girl who is under the legal age for sex who is thought to dress provocatively in order to attract a man who, if it is discovered that he had sex with an underage girl, will be arrested and end up in jail.
Jailbreak = an escape from prison (also to gain access to the operating system of an electronic gadget in order to make unauthorised changes).
Jailhouse (US) = the actual building containing the cells.

Apart from the TV show, "Prison Break", none of those phrases ever substitute "prison" for "jail".
 
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