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[ UK /fɹˈiːdəm/ ]
[ US /ˈfɹidəm/ ]
NOUN
  1. the condition of being free; the power to act or speak or think without externally imposed restraints
  2. immunity from an obligation or duty

How To Use freedom In A Sentence

  • I'd live the transient and ephemeral existence of a backpacker for a week, an existence of freedom and simple pleasures.
  • Such a level of monitoring is not only impracticable; it is incompatible with intellectual freedom.
  • Education is the key to unlocking the world, a passport to freedom. Oprah Winfrey 
  • Freedom was alive as well, in a vivid and scarcely palatable way. Times, Sunday Times
  • Andrews assumes that the lyric poet's freedom to dissent is only the freedom to say ‘yes’ to the American ideology - individualism.
  • Jackson and Lee continued to preside over the wanton slaughter of men, women and children to defend the rights of freedom for white Virginians while supporting the slavery of black Virginians, among others.
  • Fontaine has prettily set it off, and an anonymous writer has composed it in Latin Anacreontic verses; and at length our Prior has given it with equal gaiety and freedom. Curiosities of Literature, Vol. 1 (of 3)
  • The "freedom to learn" has become just another one of the government's empty slogans.
  • Every so often a rabbit would make a desperate, lung-bursting bid for freedom, only to provide an easy target for the twelve-bores.
  • But government does not have the freedom to make proposals in haste and repent at leisure. Times, Sunday Times
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