How To Use Emancipated In A Sentence
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Amongst the latter, were a number of older, emancipated women who took her in as one of themselves.
DREAMS OF INNOCENCE
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The last slave was reportedly emancipated by the EPLF in the late 1970s.
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It was to be a shield of freedom to protect the emancipated slave against abuses from the states.
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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
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Finally the arts are now emancipated from the stifling cloak of puritanical hypocrisy.
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Slavery was abolished in Jamaica in 1833; but it was not until 1838 that slaves were actually emancipated.
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We live in more emancipated times.
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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)
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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.
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`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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Males were likely to obtain extrapair paternity while their own social mates were incubating and the males were emancipated from mate guarding and parental duties.
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By abstinence from meat and from sexual activity, the soul could be gradually emancipated from its bodily fetters.
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At the beginning of the twentieth century the Czars ruled over a population of 164 million, consisting overwhelmingly of peasants who had been emancipated from actual serfdom only a generation earlier.
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I need hardly translate the word belemnite 'for the benefit of the ladies,' as people used to do in the dark and unemancipated eighteenth century; but as our boys have left off learning Greek just as their sisters are beginning to act the 'Antigone' at private theatricals, I may perhaps be pardoned if I explain, 'for the benefit of the gentlemen,' that the word is practically equivalent to javelin-fossil.
Falling in Love With Other Essays on More Exact Branches of Science
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Like emancipated concubines, prisoners of war were enlisted to rationalize the conflict as a civilizing mission.
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Godard once said that by "ratting" to the police she had emancipated herself.
Patricia Zohn: Culture Zohn: The Enduring Magic of Breathless
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That war preserved the Union and emancipated the slaves.
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Therefore, males are emancipated from mate guarding and parental duties during the incubation period, making this period free for opportunistic extrapair activities.
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an emancipated young woman pursuing her career
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The country had been emancipated from thirteen years of middle-level Conservative rule of reasonable efficiency, modest dynamism but small-power idealism.
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Guiana 1838 takes the viewer back into the colonial time when slaves were emancipated and the colonial master was finding it difficult to get labour to work the endless fields of cane.
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When my baby napped, I felt emancipated, and raced around the house tending to what I thought were important, urgent and essential tasks.
Chicken Soup for the Soul: New Moms
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Long emancipated from literal serfdom, the peasants in the last 150 years of the monarchy were also freed from the control and influence of the lord, even as they struggled to secure their small holdings.
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Spinster and bluestocking, Niblock is also something of an outsider, an emancipated transgressor in polite Edwardian society, recalling the unsung role of the female intellectual, adventurer and agent in the birth of the modernist period; a mischievous subversion of the Victorian upper class male.
Archive 2008-12-01
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What I say is, he that is emancipated never indulges in that intellectual gladiatorship which is implied by a dialectical disputation for the sake of victory.
The Mahabharata of Krishna-Dwaipayana Vyasa, Volume 3 Books 8, 9, 10, 11 and 12
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He'd gotten emancipated minor status at seventeen and rented a small, run-down place.
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The newly emancipated peasants could then be hired, very cheaply, for much more profitable enterprises, by the richer landowners.
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Without the True Name, no one is emancipated.
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Florina describes herself as a traditional emancipated Romani woman.
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Nearly 25 % of emancipated youth become homeless 2-4 years after leaving foster care.
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Armed with skills such as metalworking and pottery making, the newly emancipated Texans flourished as weavers, potters, blacksmiths, masons and carpenters.
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Or to put it the other way around, an elaborate contrapuntal texture with emancipated dissonance is a perfect metaphor for the urgent but ineffectual efforts that Pierrot is making.
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Threatened by plots, riots, jacquerie, and pressure from the newly emancipated crowds and journalists of Paris, the Assembly quickly moved far beyond the wishes of the people as expressed in the cahiers.
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Legally, a number of situations exist in which minors are considered emancipated and therefore able to give sole consent for treatment.
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What this form of entertainment has done is to take the woman who had been emancipated from her given traditional roles by the feminists, and relocate her in the domestic arena.
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Even after the Civil War, when slaves were emancipated, comparatively few Gullah moved to northern cities.
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It ' s not a good sign, or portent, or whatever, that the only affecting character in " Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 1 " proves to be the emancipated elf Dobby, a bandy-legged, floppy-eared, scrawny-necked and mostly digital creature — based on Toby Jones ' s performance — who yanks really hard at your heartstrings in his hour of distress.
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The proportion of highly placed advisers who had nothing to lose if serfs were emancipated would accordingly diminish.
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Rebels, as I have come to realise, are never quite emancipated from the people against whom they rebel.
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One family counselor suggested that Sophie be emancipated from her family at 16 years of age.
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Thy dead, murdered corse is the watchword, and, with God's grace, the victor paean of an emancipated, chastened, glorified Republic!
An Address in Commemoration of Abraham Lincoln
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Entering a society primarily shaped by these European interests, black women were emancipated from slavery into legally sanctioned inequality.
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One recalls that it was Czar Alexander II who emancipated the Russian serfs.
Russian President Googles Capitalism
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Though its etymology is uncertain, ghetto is likely derived from either borghetto (”little borough”) or geto (”foundry”) in Venetain dialect which originally described the city’s foundry district, an islet that became gated and guarded when “The Council of Ten” decreed that all Jews reside there from 1516 until 1797 when Napoleon emancipated them.
Ghetto Fabulous Typography | Jewschool
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Thanks to that separation, business decisions were emancipated from the pressure of moral obligations and personal commitments that guide family life.
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We should not feel provincial, lower class, but must be emancipated with our own voice.
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The rivers of emancipated men neither disembogue into the ocean of spirit nor evaporate into the abyss of nonentity, but are blended with infinitude as an ontological integer.
The Destiny of the Soul A Critical History of the Doctrine of a Future Life
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These images are contrasted to the modern-looking, emancipated Danish women.
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Historical perspective emancipated academics from the restrictions of contemporary viewpoints.
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For the better security of these new-born civil rights we are now about to pass the greatest and the grandest act in this series of acts that have emancipated a race and disinthralled a nation.
History of the Thirty-Ninth Congress of the United States
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One family counselor suggested that Sophie be emancipated from her family at 16 years of age.
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We live in more emancipated times.
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Aboriginal people were emancipated in the 1960s.
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Fabre went on to attack women's clubs, claiming, to much applause, that they were composed of ‘adventuresses, wandering female knights, emancipated girls, and amazons'.
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It seems years before the Scots and Irish (thought to be the first settlers there) arrived, emancipated black slaves had already established a community there.
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Etruscan art reveals an aristocratic society in which women enjoyed an emancipated style of life.
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It was to be a shield of freedom to protect the emancipated slave against abuses from the states.
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That is a perfect description of an elaborate contrapuntal texture with ‘emancipated dissonance’.
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a man, with all the moving instincts of a loving and tender heart: and as a ruler, sure of his duty, he spoke the disinthralling edict, when multitudes still doubted: as a man he rejoiced in the glorious prospect of a race emancipated from a bondage more cruel than the grave, and elevated to the privileges of manhood and the opportunity of respect and honor.
A Commemorative Discourse on the Death of Abraham Lincoln
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The sickness was far progressed by that time, and the emancipated retching man that had spoken to a younger boy was only a shadow of his father.
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And the freedom of the emancipated slave was relative rather than absolute.
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Aboriginal people were emancipated in the 1960s.
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They did it to liberate the people of Iraq, so that 25 million Iraqis would be emancipated from a sadistic regime, the greatest victory for human rights since the defeat of the Soviet Union.
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Basically, it is an African American art form, and it grew up after the slaves were emancipated.
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By this time writing had been truly emancipated from the state.
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The German, emancipated from feudalism and kaiserism, is a pretty good citizen.
The New York Times Current History of the European War, Vol. 1, January 9, 1915 What Americans Say to Europe
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In other words, women get emancipated but remain unliberated.
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Boyishly reared by an emancipated mother and a suicidal father, she is the victim of heredity, environment and her own anachronistic position as an outsider in the new socialist England.
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They rejoiced in the change, not merely from sympathy with the disinthralled negroes, but because it had emancipated them from a disheartening surveillance, and opened new fields of usefulness.
The Anti-Slavery Examiner, Omnibus
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The mountains remained mostly unoccupied until the slaves were emancipated in 1838.
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So the vision such nihilists offered 20 th-century man was of a destiny no more elevated than a dog or cat, emancipated from morality other than subservience to the state.
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However, this duty ends if the minor gets married or becomes emancipated.
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Slaves were emancipated in 1863, but more than a century passed before the Voting Rights Act became law.
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The slaves were emancipated in 1834 but their living conditions were little better than they had been under slavery, since they had no way to get food and shelter.
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French colonies have used gens de couleur liberes to speak of emancipated black people.
What and who is POC/WOC? « Digital immigrant
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The unions were not emancipated from Thatcherite, neo-liberal greed, as everyone thought they would be when they voted for a Labour government in 1997.
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Alexander II realized that to modernize mean that Russia needed to westernize, so in 1861 he emancipated the serfs from bondage.
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They took advantage of their large estates, and the feeble position of emancipated serfs, to supply urban markets in western Europe.
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The truth simply is that if some remedy be not soon found for the situation created by these people, who are as stupid as they are mischievous, in a few years we shall be obliged either to decuple the gendarmerie, or to allow every citizen to go about armed with a revolver, in order to protect himself against our much too liberally emancipated young scolos! '
France and the Republic A Record of Things Seen and Learned in the French Provinces During the 'Centennial' Year 1889
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Basically, it is an African American art form, and it grew up after the slaves were emancipated.
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The gains of feudalism didn't wither away when the serf was emancipated and became a ‘free’ worker in the new capitalist society.
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By this time writing had been truly emancipated from the state.
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The 1950s is the moment when we felt ourselves emancipated from the colonial past.
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A supposedly emancipated market is emasculated by a torrent of trade-distorting subsidies.
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When he worked he worked with every particle of energy he possessed, but when he "loafed," as he expressed it, he cast all care to the winds and was like an emancipated school-boy.
Peggy Stewart at School
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The working class will not be in a position to create a science and an art of its own until it has been fully emancipated from its present class position.
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The church dates back to the 1830's when recently emancipated slaves were given lands at Kingstown.
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Even the states that permit teenagers to be emancipated from their parents, allowing them to be treated legally as adults, ordinarily mandate that the parents must agree.
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Women are still struggling to be fully emancipated.
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The 1950s and 1960s were a great transition period in China's history that witnessed millions of women emancipated from family constraints.
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Labor - saving devices have emancipated women from kitchen drudgery.
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I have emancipated myself from that so far I have reason to consider false; - I am able to have faith in singleness of motive, and to tread under foot all temptations to expediency.
Zoe: The History of Two Lives
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Unlike Douglass and Jacobs, Truth did not spend years living as a fugitive slave, and she had the additional legal protection of being officially emancipated by the state within months of her escape.
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They also magnified the fall in sugar production from the emancipated work force in British colonies.
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In Montreal this has been done, and, as the seignoral rights of succession lapse, it will soon be done every where, for the recent enactments have emancipated many already.
Canada and the Canadians Volume I
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This graceful development of belief, emancipated from dogma and reducing so many substantial bodies to pale shades, so many articles once held as solid realities to the strange tenuity of dreams, was not the Christianity of Voltaire's time, any more than it was that of the Holy Office.
Voltaire
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Of course, not everyone is tripping along in a state of emancipated bliss.
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Emancipated at last from family expectations, he was free to pursue his own interests.