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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31. The preservation of the Union, not the emancipation of the slaves, was still the primary objective of the Lincoln administration.
32. In the decades before Emancipation only a few isolated individuals had carried dissent to the point of revolutionary commitment.
33. In Chapter 8, I sketched out three different levels of rationality: groundedness, enlightenment and emancipation.
34. The first of these is characterized by state control of the press and its eventual emancipation from such controls.
35. Nearly all teenaged girls in the ghetto know-and many of them celebrate-this day of emancipation.
36. In our culturally and ethnically mixed society the degree of emancipation of women was uneven.
37. It would be wrong to suggest that women were a liberated force for female emancipation in Huaiwiri.
38. In so far as the idea of emancipation moved forward in government circles in 1856, the landless variety prevailed over the landed.
39. What exactly the government did mean by freedom was hard to discern in the nineteen legislative Acts which together constituted the emancipation.
40. It means that women should seize communication power for their own emancipation and the liberation of all oppressed groups.
41. But he left no unequivocal evidence of why he personally felt Emancipation necessary.
42. In fact the growing demand for immediate emancipation had captured organised antislavery at the national level by the spring of 1831.
43. Plans for the reform of local government were now in step with those for the emancipation of the serfs.
44. There is no doubt that they played a major part in maintaining interest in abolition and emancipation through different phases of antislavery.
44. Sentencedict.com try its best to gather and create good sentences.
45. The insistence that emancipation was in the national interest expressed this.
46. Three Levels on which rationality has practical significance may be distinguished, which I shall call groundedness, enlightenment and emancipation.
47. It may be that with greater equality and emancipation the proportion of female criminals will rise.
48. The repressive measures adopted in the South after the Emancipation Proclamation were rapidly dissipated.
49. The social repercussions of Emancipation and accelerated economic development gave rise to a range of diverse pressures upon the regime.
50. For many abolitionists emancipation was celebrated by raising Buxton to the pantheon of heroes.
51. He was an active parliamentarian who supported Catholic emancipation, parliamentary reform, and the repeal of the corn laws.
52. Stanley's government proposals on emancipation in mid-May provoked hostility amongst delegates on the grounds of compensation and the apprenticeship scheme.
53. Under emancipation,(sentencedict.com) the Negro was thought to be doomed to extinction.
54. Since the province was a hotbed of gentry resistance to the emancipation, confrontation looked a real possibility.
55. I wonder if Lincoln had read those words when he presented the Emancipation Proclamation to his cabinet.
56. The government found it expedient to slacken the grip of censorship in order to encourage loyal expressions of support for the Emancipation programme.
57. Village life and the peasant outlook were conditioned by the administrative arrangements adopted at Emancipation.
58. But emancipation is a proclamation and not a fact.
59. He believes very strongly in female emancipation.
60. He was for emancipation by stages and with compensation.
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