14 adjectives to describe liberation

The information communicated to the Department since the receipt of your letter of the 3d instant is sufficiently explicit, and a note founded upon it has been, by direction of the President, addressed to Mr. Stevenson, instructing him to demand the immediate liberation of Mr. Greely and indemnity for his imprisonment.

Whatever the cause may have been, the result is obvious: a sudden liberation, a delighted expansion, of numerous private individualities.

When they were gone Lulu felt an instant liberation.

Washington did not have much to say about it and did little more than to provide for the ultimate liberation of his slaves and the teaching of their children to read.

The pleasurable emotions which my impending liberation aroused within me served to soften my speech and render me more tractable.

The actual liberation of all our citizens who were prisoners in Algiers, while it gratifies every feeling heart, is itself an earnest of a satisfactory termination of the whole negotiation.

In his retirement at Trent, Charles began to indulge the hope of a speedy liberation from danger.

"The initiation into the Mysteries," he says, "scenically represented the mythic descent into Hades and the return from thence to the light of day; by which was meant the entrance into the Ark and the subsequent liberation from its dark enclosure.

As water, diverted from its free course, becomes impure in the basin which imprisons it, and when released, will still retain its impurity; so it is not to be thought that instincts perverted by slavery, habits depraved from childhood, could be reformed and redressed in the slave by a tardy liberation.

Baylen is a wretched place, celebrated for having the first palm-tree which those see who come from Madrid, and for the victory gained by Castaños over the French forces under Dupont, which occasioned the flight of Joseph Buonaparte from Madrid, and the temporary liberation of Spain from the French yoke.

The aim is the solidarity and independence of nations;the freedom of our peopletheir liberation from the yoke of tyranny.

Liberation N. liberation, disengagement, release, enlargement, emancipation; disenthrallment^, disenthralment^; affranchisement^, enfranchisement; manumission; discharge, dismissal.

He laid by the bed-side a few articles of food, that he was allowed to bring with him, and again holding out the hope of eventual liberation, he proposed to take his leave.

Much of the excellence of bread depends upon the thoroughness of this kneading, since if the yeast is not intimately and equally mixed with every particle of flour, the bread will not be uniform; some portions will be heavy and compact, while others will be full of large, open cavities, from the excessive liberation of gas.

14 adjectives to describe  liberation