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词汇 emancipation
释义

Definition of emancipation in English:

emancipation

noun ɪˌmansɪˈpeɪʃ(ə)nəˌmænsəˈpeɪʃ(ə)n
mass noun
  • 1The fact or process of being set free from legal, social, or political restrictions; liberation.

    the social and political emancipation of women
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Religion is meant for the emancipation of living beings.
    • He was really fighting for national emancipation.
    • To the proletariat the imperial suffrage has been a mighty weapon in its battle for emancipation.
    • Emancipation enormously raised the stature of the Union cause internationally.
    • It is a question of cooperating with the oppressed and supporting their emancipation.
    • One could even say the story implies that emancipation is not properly a woman's pursuit or destiny.
    • Perhaps the bicycle's most important legacy is its effect upon some women's emancipation.
    • Actually the majority of the essay regards the question of women's emancipation.
    • They also offer joyous, kidlike emancipation from the lonely work of conditioning.
    • In their emancipation lies the wellbeing of the world.
    • This state of emancipation is a state beyond mind and matter, where both sensation and perception cease.
    • Marx pointed out that political emancipation was a different thing from universal human emancipation.
    • At a different scale, we may invoke female emancipation to explain the declining populations of Europe.
    • It has not yet raised the inspiring banner of working class emancipation.
    • It is certain that for him, emancipation is no part of a reform program of the church for society.
    • He wanted to push for rights for his people and ultimately called for Catholic emancipation.
    • Big Maggie heralds a new emancipation in Irish society.
    • In the person of our heroine we are presented with a plea for emancipation.
    • The old ideas, in the old organisations, represented quite the opposite of social emancipation.
    • Learning how to serve had begun to yield to women's changing aspirations and increasing economic emancipation.
    Synonyms
    freeing, liberation, liberating, setting free, release, releasing, letting loose/out, setting loose/free, discharge
    unchaining, unfettering, unshackling, untying, unyoking, uncaging, unbridling
    freedom, liberty
    historical manumission
    rare disenthralment
    1. 1.1 The freeing of someone from slavery.
      the early struggle for emancipation from slavery
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The emancipation of the serfs in 1861 left the countryside in deep poverty.
      • He went into that Alliance and there denounced the only true friends of emancipation - the abolitionists.
      • McClellan made no secret of his opposition to emancipation.
      • Some deal with war or politics, some deal with the bittersweet issues surrounding emancipation.
      • Following emancipation, we are able to feel with Elisabeth what it must have been like to suddenly have a surname.
      • Disgust at this treatment of Africans led to demands for emancipation of the slaves and the abolition of the slave trade in the 19th century.
      • Some say the serfs were better before emancipation; some say things became better after emancipation.
      • Fairclough chronicles the circumstances in which Southern black educators worked from emancipation to the 1970s.
      • The emancipation of the slaves was fought for and won by the slaves themselves.
      • He insists that emancipation was perhaps the single most significant act ever carried out by a US president.
      • Emancipation was supposed to have settled all that over 150 years ago.
      • But the ultimate example of Lincoln's constitutional scruples was emancipation.
      • Emancipation is the event most associated with Lincoln next to the preservation of the Union.
      • Retelling the myth of emancipation from slavery impels you to reclaim the story of your wider self.
      • The country squires were firmly opposed to emancipation.
      • This history of struggle did not end with the emancipation of the slaves.
      • The truth is that the emancipation of the slaves was a parliamentary reform, the act of the nation and not of its rulers.
      • Freedom was preferable to slavery, and African Americans had gained benefits from emancipation.
      • Emancipation in fact did little in the short run to change the structure of Russian society.
      • Our subject, of course, was how to represent the story of slavery from the slave trade to emancipation in six hours.

Definition of emancipation in US English:

emancipation

nounəˌmansəˈpāSH(ə)nəˌmænsəˈpeɪʃ(ə)n
  • 1The fact or process of being set free from legal, social, or political restrictions; liberation.

    the emancipation of feminist ideas
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Learning how to serve had begun to yield to women's changing aspirations and increasing economic emancipation.
    • It has not yet raised the inspiring banner of working class emancipation.
    • Marx pointed out that political emancipation was a different thing from universal human emancipation.
    • It is certain that for him, emancipation is no part of a reform program of the church for society.
    • Big Maggie heralds a new emancipation in Irish society.
    • He was really fighting for national emancipation.
    • Actually the majority of the essay regards the question of women's emancipation.
    • They also offer joyous, kidlike emancipation from the lonely work of conditioning.
    • To the proletariat the imperial suffrage has been a mighty weapon in its battle for emancipation.
    • Religion is meant for the emancipation of living beings.
    • One could even say the story implies that emancipation is not properly a woman's pursuit or destiny.
    • He wanted to push for rights for his people and ultimately called for Catholic emancipation.
    • It is a question of cooperating with the oppressed and supporting their emancipation.
    • At a different scale, we may invoke female emancipation to explain the declining populations of Europe.
    • In the person of our heroine we are presented with a plea for emancipation.
    • In their emancipation lies the wellbeing of the world.
    • This state of emancipation is a state beyond mind and matter, where both sensation and perception cease.
    • The old ideas, in the old organisations, represented quite the opposite of social emancipation.
    • Emancipation enormously raised the stature of the Union cause internationally.
    • Perhaps the bicycle's most important legacy is its effect upon some women's emancipation.
    Synonyms
    freeing, liberation, liberating, setting free, release, releasing, letting loose, letting out, setting loose, discharge
    1. 1.1 The freeing of someone from slavery.
      the early struggle for emancipation from slavery
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Freedom was preferable to slavery, and African Americans had gained benefits from emancipation.
      • Emancipation in fact did little in the short run to change the structure of Russian society.
      • The emancipation of the slaves was fought for and won by the slaves themselves.
      • Our subject, of course, was how to represent the story of slavery from the slave trade to emancipation in six hours.
      • The country squires were firmly opposed to emancipation.
      • Emancipation was supposed to have settled all that over 150 years ago.
      • The emancipation of the serfs in 1861 left the countryside in deep poverty.
      • Emancipation is the event most associated with Lincoln next to the preservation of the Union.
      • But the ultimate example of Lincoln's constitutional scruples was emancipation.
      • Fairclough chronicles the circumstances in which Southern black educators worked from emancipation to the 1970s.
      • He insists that emancipation was perhaps the single most significant act ever carried out by a US president.
      • The truth is that the emancipation of the slaves was a parliamentary reform, the act of the nation and not of its rulers.
      • Some deal with war or politics, some deal with the bittersweet issues surrounding emancipation.
      • Following emancipation, we are able to feel with Elisabeth what it must have been like to suddenly have a surname.
      • Some say the serfs were better before emancipation; some say things became better after emancipation.
      • He went into that Alliance and there denounced the only true friends of emancipation - the abolitionists.
      • This history of struggle did not end with the emancipation of the slaves.
      • Disgust at this treatment of Africans led to demands for emancipation of the slaves and the abolition of the slave trade in the 19th century.
      • McClellan made no secret of his opposition to emancipation.
      • Retelling the myth of emancipation from slavery impels you to reclaim the story of your wider self.
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