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emancipated
[ ih-man-suh-pey-tid ]
adjective
- not constrained or restricted by custom, tradition, superstition, etc.:
a modern, emancipated woman.
- freed, as from slavery or bondage.
Other Words From
- une·manci·pated adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of emancipated1
Example Sentences
The group’s name derives from Union Gen. William T. Sherman’s unfulfilled promise to grant some emancipated slaves “40 acres and a mule” to help them start over after the Civil War.
"We supported her, she tried to get emancipated. It ended up not working out and she didn’t."
The series also asserts that Schneider was not only heavily involved in Bynes’ professional life but in her personal life as well, including trying to help Bynes get emancipated from her parents.
Ultimately, about 15,000 black Americans sailed back to Africa, most of them going to Liberia in West Africa, which was planned and founded as a homeland for emancipated American slaves.
Her third great-grandfather Dean Harris was likely born into slavery in Georgia around 1835 and was emancipated after the Civil War.
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