emancipate

These are word's examples related to emancipate. Click on any word to go to its word's detail page. Or, go to the definition of emancipate.

Examples of emancipate

  • But she considered herself to be emancipated from control. 

  • It neither made him to be humane to his slaves, nor to emancipate them. 

  • Produce a bill to emancipate the slaves in the District of Columbia, or, if you prefer it, to emancipate those born hereafter. 

  • She and her husband distinguished themselves several years ago, in Jamaica, by immediately emancipating their slaves. 

  • The strength of the council lay not in itself but in the circumstances that had quickened its intelligence, dispelled its vanities, and emancipated it from traditional ambitions and antagonisms. 

  • Together they emancipated the art of experiment from being a mere craft activity and endowed it with the status of a science.

  • This left co-operative structures fragile, new social agents without resources, and the state's earlier commitment to emancipate the indigenous peasantry barely begun.

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

  • Perhaps, then, a nonrepresentational vision would be one that would emancipate us from space-time.

  • 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.

  • The argument asks that the desire for unified or emancipated futures be exposed as based in fictions of the past.

  • This indicates that the profane world had emancipated itself from the biblical and classical codes that dominated painting until then.

  • Eventually physical chemistry was loosened from chemistry in the same way that, somewhat later, chemical physics was emancipated from physics.

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

  • Once ritualized, this gesture is already emancipated from its functionality.

  • Is lex mercatoria, for example, actually emancipated from politics - or is it precisely political by pretending not to be so?

  • The second-order performance emancipates itself from its assumed reproductive function as an independent aesthetic artefact.

  • We believe that it is beneficial to emancipate musicians from the dominant 'piano metaphor' that, while ubiquitous in synthesis, is an impoverished and limiting constraint.

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

  • It has been taught to be critical, creative, enthusiastic and emancipated, only to become aware of the hard reality after their graduation.

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