liberate
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lib·er·ate
(lĭb′ə-rāt′)tr.v. lib·er·at·ed, lib·er·at·ing, lib·er·ates
1. To set free, as from oppression, confinement, or foreign control.
2. Chemistry To release (a gas, for example) from combination.
3. Slang To obtain by illegal or stealthy action: tried to sell appliances that were liberated during the riot.
lib′er·at′ing·ly adv.
lib′er·a′tor n.
liberate
(ˈlɪbəˌreɪt)vb (tr)
1. to give liberty to; make free
2. (Chemistry) to release (something, esp a gas) from chemical combination during a chemical reaction
3. (Military) to release from occupation or subjugation by a foreign power
4. to free from social prejudices or injustices
5. euphemistic or facetious to steal
ˈliberˌator n
lib•er•ate
(ˈlɪb əˌreɪt)v.t. -at•ed, -at•ing.
1. to set free, as from imprisonment.
2. to free (a nation or area) from control by a foreign or oppressive government.
3. to free (a group or individual) from social or economic constraints or discrimination, esp. arising from traditional role expectations or bias.
4. to disengage; set free from combination, as a gas.
5. Informal. to steal or take over illegally: The prisoners liberated a consignment of chocolates.
[1615–25; < Latin līberātus, past participle of līberāre to free, derivative of līber free]
lib′er•a`tor, n.
syn: See release.
liberate
Past participle: liberated
Gerund: liberating
Imperative |
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liberate |
liberate |
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Verb | 1. | liberate - give equal rights to; of women and minorities change state, turn - undergo a transformation or a change of position or action; "We turned from Socialism to Capitalism"; "The people turned against the President when he stole the election" |
2. | ![]() unspell - release from a spell unchain - make free bail - release after a security has been paid run - set animals loose to graze bail out - free on bail parole - release a criminal from detention and place him on parole; "The prisoner was paroled after serving 10 years in prison" | |
3. | liberate - grant freedom to; "The students liberated their slaves upon graduating from the university" affranchise, enfranchise - grant freedom to; as from slavery or servitude; "Slaves were enfranchised in the mid-19th century" manumit, emancipate - free from slavery or servitude decolonise, decolonize - grant independence to (a former colony); "West Africa was decolonized in the early 1960's" | |
4. | liberate - release (gas or energy) as a result of a chemical reaction or physical decomposition chemical science, chemistry - the science of matter; the branch of the natural sciences dealing with the composition of substances and their properties and reactions bring forth, generate - bring into existence; "The new manager generated a lot of problems"; "The computer bug generated chaos in the office"; "The computer generated this image"; "The earthquake generated a tsunami" |
liberate
liberate
verbTranslations
يُحَرِّر
osvobodit
befri
felszabadít
frelsa
išsivadavimasišvadavimasišvaduotojas
atbrīvot
osvoboditi
liberate
[ˈlɪbəreɪt] VT (= free) → liberar, libertar (from de) [+ prisoner, slave] → poner en libertad; [+ gas etc] → dejar escaparliberate
vt
(= free) prisoner, country, city → befreien; to liberate somebody from something → jdn von etw befreien
gas etc → freisetzen
liberate
(ˈlibəreit) verb to set free. The prisoners were liberated by the new government.
libeˈration nounˈliberator noun