emancipating Meaning & Definition

  • En [ iˈmæn.sɪ.peɪt]
  • Us [ iˈmæn.sə.peɪt]

Meaning of emancipating In English

More Definitions of emancipating

Examples of emancipating

  • Every important turn in human history has always been accompanied by a movement of emancipating the mind.

  • This fact again invites reflection on the possibility of bringing these programmes closer to groups of people most in need of liberating or emancipating interventions.

  • When dissonant layers behave much like metrical layers, they can be considered structural, emancipating metrical dissonance from its need to resolve.

  • The objectives of these programmes should be emancipating and liberating, and their mode of delivery should be especially participative.

  • Emancipating men from material work was the precondition for the development of human intelligence and through it civilization.

  • Populistic democracy was imagined as an emancipating force that could break through all social yokes and wash away all social inequalities.

  • Critical action research is not only directed at improving practice but at emancipating those that participate in it.

  • Clarke points out how the new environments created by man emancipating himself from geographical influences have an increasing effect upon the patterns of population distribution and movement.

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