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  1. EMANCIPATION definition: 1. the process of giving people social or political freedom and rights: 2. the process of giving…. Learn more.

  2. to free a person from another persons control. (Definition of emancipate from the Cambridge Academic Content Dictionary © Cambridge University Press) Examples of emancipate. emancipate. Together they emancipated the art of experiment from being a mere craft activity and endowed it with the status of a science. From the Cambridge English Corpus.

  3. The meaning of EMANCIPATE is to free from restraint, control, or the power of another; especially : to free from bondage. How to use emancipate in a sentence. Synonym Discussion of Emancipate.

  4. noun. Did you know? The Emancipation Proclamation, issued by Abraham Lincoln on January 1, 1863, ordered that enslaved people living in rebellious territories be released from the bonds of ownership and made free people—their own masters.

  5. Emancipation is being set free from the control of someone or something. Your emancipation from your parents comes when you turn 18 and are legally considered an adult.

  6. the act of freeing somebody, especially from legal, political or social controls that limit what they can do. the emancipation of slaves. Wordfinder. Want to learn more?

  7. Emancipation definition: the act of emancipating. . See examples of EMANCIPATION used in a sentence.

  8. Emancipate definition: to free from restraint, influence, or the like.. See examples of EMANCIPATE used in a sentence.

  9. noun. 1. the act of freeing or state of being freed; liberation. 2. informal. freedom from inhibition and convention. Collins English Dictionary. Copyright © HarperCollins Publishers. Derived forms. emancipationist (eˌmanciˈpationist) noun. Word Frequency. emancipation in American English. (ɪˌmænsəˈpeiʃən) noun. 1. the act of emancipating. 2.

  10. to free somebody, especially from legal, political or social controls that limit what they can do synonym free. be emancipated Slaves were not emancipated until 1863 in the United States. be emancipated from something They felt they had at last been emancipated from their father’s control. Oxford Collocations Dictionary. Word Origin.