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emancipated

[ UK /ɪmˈɑːnsɪpˌe‍ɪtɪd/ ]
[ US /ɪˈmænsəˌpeɪtɪd/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. free from traditional social restraints
    an emancipated young woman pursuing her career
    a liberated lifestyle

How To Use emancipated In A Sentence

  • Amongst the latter, were a number of older, emancipated women who took her in as one of themselves. DREAMS OF INNOCENCE
  • The last slave was reportedly emancipated by the EPLF in the late 1970s.
  • It was to be a shield of freedom to protect the emancipated slave against abuses from the states.
  • That they endeavour to procure from the National Government the appropriation of adequate funds to aid the voluntary emigration of all emancipated people of colour, to any country where a suitable asylum may be found: and that, as an auxiliary means, they petition the state legislature for the passage of resolutions approbatory of such measure. The Journal of Negro History, Volume 6, 1921
  • Finally the arts are now emancipated from the stifling cloak of puritanical hypocrisy.
  • Slavery was abolished in Jamaica in 1833; but it was not until 1838 that slaves were actually emancipated.
  • We live in more emancipated times.
  • The Government, which had not yet emancipated itself from the habit of "assorting" its citizens and dividing them into a protected and a tolerated class, set out to elaborate measures for "curbing" the Jews belonging to the latter category. History of the Jews in Russia and Poland. Volume II From the death of Alexander I. until the death of Alexander III. (1825-1894)
  • The problem of teen homelessness was close to his heart: He left home when he was only 14 to escape an ‘intolerable’ situation, and he became a legally emancipated minor at 16.
  • `They can't stand the sight of an emancipated female owl, that's why," said Alba, impatiently. THE ANCIENT AND SOLITARY REIGN
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