Definitionn. someone who releases people from captivity or bondage
Last update: February 5, 2016
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He led the freedom movement and was hiled as the liberator of the nation. [Please select]
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Garrison established the Liberator in 1831; W. [Please select]
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They passed under the hugecloaked Liberator's form. [Please select]
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Self-knowledge--and the new science is full of self-knowledge--is a great liberator: if perhaps it imposes some retrenchment, essentially it revives courage. [Please select]
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The ass thanked its liberator after its fashion, went up to him, fawned on him, and received his caresses. [Please select]
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The men "who killed the Liberator" could never again hope to carry with them the suffrages of any number of their countrymen. [Please select]
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For twenty years previous to the founding of Garrison's Liberator in 1831, organized abolition movements had been almost unknown in New England. [Please select]
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The first number of the Liberator contained an Address to the Public, which sounded the keynote of Garrison's career. [Please select]
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It was significant, also, that the Liberator was published in Boston, the literary center of the country. [Please select]
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(1885-1889) is the story of the editor of the Liberator told exhaustively by his children. [Please select]
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Anarchism is the great liberator of man from the phantoms that have held him captive; it is the arbiter and pacifier of the two forces for individual and social harmony. [Please select]
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