0 If you are shackled by something, it prevents you from doing what you want to do:
1 one of a pair of metal rings connected by a chain and fastened to a person’s wrists or the bottoms of the legs to prevent the person from escaping:
It is in the city that the woman's mind is awakened and begins to break the psychological shackles.
As a consequence of this religious emancipation, only those individuals who have shed the shackles of religion can be permitted into its secularly hallowed halls.
This would avert the danger of becoming shackled to a single architect.
Significantly, it also allows women to break free from the patriarchal shackles of their extended families in the rural hinterland.
In addition to the presence of guards, security was achieved by shackling and chaining the prisoners.
How does one free a libratory ideology from the shackles of becoming itself another normative practice in schools?
It was perhaps this personal need to throw off shackles that most influenced her theory of reformatory and prison discipline.
The past had become a dead weight that held society back; it shackled people's minds and stifled their sense of patriotism.
中文繁体
阻撓,束縛…
More中文简体
阻挠,束缚…
MoreEspañol
coartar, constreñir, poner grilletes…
MorePortuguês
restringir, acorrentar…
MoreTürk dili
zincirlemek, prangaya vurmak, kelepçelemek…
MoreFrançais
mettre les fers à…
MoreČeština
nasadit pouta…
MoreDansk
lænke…
More