emancipate
suomi-englanti sanakirjaemancipate englannista suomeksi
vapauttaa
emancipate englanniksi
(senseid) To free (a person or group) from the oppression or restraint of another; to liberate.
(RQ:Donne Works) first work,''to redeem'', to vindicate them from the usurper, to deliver them from the intruder, to emancipate them from the tyrant, to cancel the covenant between hell and them, and restore them. so far to their liberty, as that they might come to their first Master if they would: this was ''redeeming''.
(quote-book) enacted a comprehensive series of domestic reforms. They transformed backward, semifeudal Prussia into a modern state: abolishing serfdom, granting self-government to towns, with elected town councils replacing royal appointees; and formally emancipating the Jews, granting them full citizenship for the first time, even if full social acceptance remained wanting.
To cause (a place) to be free from the colonization or rule of another entity.
(sense) (synonyms)
(ux)
(RQ:Harte Luck)
''Often followed by'' from: chiefly with reference to slavery in the States, and in America|Central and America: to set free (oneself or someone) from imprisonment, or from serfdom or slavery.
(synonyms)
(RQ:Macaulay History of England) Jeffreys transported was eight hundred and forty-one. These men, more wretched than their associates who suffered death, were distributed into gangs, and bestowed on persons who enjoyed favour at court. The conditions of the gift were that the convicts should be carried beyond sea as slaves, that they should not be emancipated for ten years, and that the place of their banishment should be some West Indian island.
(RQ:Northup Twelve Years)
(RQ:Du Bois Souls of Black Folk) saw the inevitable, and emancipated the slaves of rebels on New Year's, 1863.
To release (a minor) from the legal authority and custody which a parent or guardian has over them; also , to release (a child) from the legal authority of the paterfamilias.
(RQ:Hobbes Leviathan) And vvhen a Colony is ſetled, they are either a Common-vvealth of themſelves, diſcharged of their ſubjection to their Soveraign that ſent them, (as hath been done by many Common-vvealths of antient time,) in vvhich caſe the Common-vvealth from vvhich they vvent, vvas called their Metropolis, or Mother, and requires no more of them, then Fathers require of the Children, vvhom they emancipate, and make free from their domeſtique government, vvhich is Honour, and Friendſhip; or elſe they remain united to their Metropolis, as vvere the Colonies of the people of ''Rome''; and then they are no Common-vvealths themſelves, but Provinces, and parts of the Common-vvealth that ſent them.
(quote-book) wife had not passed ''in manum''—and that was common enough even during the republic and universal in the later empire—she did not become a member of his family; she remained a member of the family in which she was born, or, if its head was deceased, or she had been emancipated, was the sole member of a family of her own. Both sons and daughters on emancipation ceased to be of the family of the ''paterfamilias'' who had emancipated them.
(quote-book)
''Often followed by'' from: to free (oneself or someone, or something) from some constraint or controlling influence (especially when evil or undue); also, to free (oneself or someone) from mental oppression.
(RQ:Evelyn Acetaria)
(RQ:Berkeley Human Knowledge)
(RQ:Kingsley Alton Locke)
(quote-book)|page=125|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/cihm_46533/page/n134/mode/1up|oclc=63048698|passage=Thou (quote-gloss) emancipatest and restorest the poor sinner by the finished work of Thy Beloved Son (quote-gloss).
(quote-book), (..) sought to emancipate the human conscience from reliance upon any earthly authority intermediate between the soul and its Maker, (..)
(quote-book)|series=The Canterbury Poets|location=London&59; New York, N.Y.|publisher=Walter Scott, 1st Baronet, of Beauclerc|Walter Scott,(nb...)|page=xxii|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/selectedpoemsofr00soutuoft/page/n25/mode/1up|oclc=2649080|passage=Duly he calls at the chancellor's door; sometimes he is admitted to immediate audience; sometimes kicketh his heels in the ante-chamber (once he kicked them for cold, but now there is a fire); sometimes a gracious message emancipateth him for the day.
(quote-song)
(senseid) To place (something) under one's control; specifically , to cause (oneself or someone) to become the slave of another person; to enslave; also, to subjugate (oneself or someone).
(RQ:Prynne Perpetuitie)
To become free from the oppression or restraint of another.
(RQ:Du Bois Souls of Black Folk)
(synonym of).
(RQ:Bacon Learning) to be fit to be emancipate, & made a knovvledge by it ſelf; (..)
(RQ:Cowper Task)
(RQ:Coleridge Sybilline Leaves)
(feminine plural of)
(inflection of)
(es-verb form of)