1 to release someone from control, duties, limits, or prison:
Muoz Rivera helped liberate Puerto Rico from Spain.
Subsequently, herself liberated into a full social conscience by her encounter with a poet, she eventually fulfils her missionary urges.
As widely scattered were over a hundred thousand prisoners of war or internees, who had to be tracked down, liberated, and succoured.
Literary theorists view the fiction operator as a liberating rather than a restrictive logical principle.
However, if one liberates the notion of internalization from the following two restrictions, things start to look different.
They gradually became liberated from context-dependent sensorimotor codes in order to support increasingly arbitrary associations and abstract reasoning.
According to structuralism, on the contrary, meaning is liberated through 'tearing apart' these units into negative, opposable features.
As syntax is now not responsible for determining every semantic distinction, it is to some degree liberated from semantics and can therefore be considerably simplified.
However, those oncospheres which are liberated directly into water do not survive.
中文繁体
解放,使自由, 偷竊,偷盜…
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解放,使自由, 偷窃,偷盗…
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liberar…
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libertar…
More日本語
~を解放する…
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özgürlüğüne kavuşturmak, kurtarmak, serbest bırakmak…
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libérer, émanciper…
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alliberar…
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