Similar words: participation, principal, anticipate, precipitation, occupation, annunciation, renunciation, participate. Meaning: [ɪ‚mænsɪ'peɪʃn] n. freeing someone from the control of another; especially a parent's relinquishing authority and control over a minor child.
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1. The world identifies Lincoln with emancipation.
2. The Emancipation Proclamation abolished slavery in the United States.
3. She showed her emancipation by piloting an aircraft.
4. They rejoiced over their own emancipation.
5. The starting point for emancipation was the freeing of children of slaves born after a certain date.
6. At that time, complete emancipation of women had not worked out in actual practice.
7. His advocacy of Catholic emancipation courted defeat in 1807.
8. The consequences of the emancipation were to be even more remarkable than the political process from which the statutes emerged.
9. By the end of the emancipation process, the authorities lacked the wherewithal to pay for the transference of land.
10. The period of emancipation, the flowering of literary tradition, the Holocaust.
11. The preliminary draft of the Emancipation Proclamation was only part of the trouble.
12. There was one significant qualification; emancipation was the ultimate objective.
13. The resounding cry of emancipation from the tyranny of imitation was echoed well into the twentieth century.
14. The Tsar's support for emancipation must be understood within the broader context of the State's role in a serf-based society.
15. Not for him the emancipation and the exultation and the divinity of creative work!
16. It was southern secession that precipitated emancipation and an end to federal support of slavery.
17. For the landed nobility,[http://sentencedict.com/emancipation.html] the impact of Emancipation was deeply disturbing.
18. The version of emancipation which became law made many concessions to the interests of the gentry.
19. We must arouse them to fight for their own emancipation.
20. Their aim is to help the working people in their struggle for emancipation.
21. The early 20th century women's movement fought for the political emancipation of women.
22. Whatever his motives, Salah was careful to underplay the contribution education might make to the emancipation and liberation of women.
23. The long-term repercussions fully justify the significance attached to Emancipation.
24. The government's overriding concern to ensure domestic stability ruled out the possibility of landless Emancipation.
25. It proved a turning point in the war leading to Lincoln emancipation proclamation liberating the slaves.
26. The government's discomfiture during the Crimean War had aroused great expectations of major change even before Alexander became committed to Emancipation.
27. It was a habit which remained a stand-by of abolitionists in the campaigns for emancipation and against apprenticeship.
28. She belongs to a family descended from free Blacks those released from slavery before the Emancipation Proclamation of 1863.
29. As we have seen, the stimulus given to the economy by Emancipation was at first limited.
30. The day, commemorating the date Texas slaves first heard about the Emancipation Proclamation, is celebrated by blacks in Texas.
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