- 看过 emancipation 的人也看了 :
- liberation
- independence
- release
- delivery
- deliverance
- liberty
- enfranchisement
emancipation 的定义
- the act of emancipating.
- the state or fact of being emancipated.
emancipation 近义词
freedom
emancipation 的近义词 8 个
emancipation 的反义词 3 个
更多emancipation例句
- They allowed women to avoid unwanted pregnancies and marriages, giving them the opportunity to pursue careers outside the home, and get on their way to financial emancipation.
- The Post also published on Thursday an interactive package documenting the progress of emancipation across states, with archival photos, personal accounts and links to The Post’s coverage.
- Gayle Rubin and Pat Califia write articles calling all consensual acts, including sadomasochism, a form of women’s emancipation.
- In other words, it took two years for the emancipation of enslaved people to materialize legally.
- As much as Juneteenth represents freedom, it also represents how emancipation was tragically delayed for enslaved people in the deepest reaches of the Confederacy.
- But from the anguish of soulless industrial lagers rises the emancipation of artisan brewing.
- The Copperheads, a group of Midwestern Democrats, made the accusation—and far worse—against President Lincoln during Emancipation.
- The Emancipation Proclamation, as Nancy Pelosi reminds us, was an executive action.
- Education for everyone, land sharing, emancipation of women, and equal rights for black Cubans.
- That's why their emancipation is such a threat to cruel patriarchal power.
- I rejoice in being able to say that the general tendency of the speeches was towards universal Emancipation, mental and physical.
- The excitement attending the reform act, indeed, had not been neglected by the friends of emancipation.
- Cruce and Leclerc, all ready to march under the guidance of your highness, to the emancipation of religion and the throne.
- Mr. Labouchere maintained that the result of the great experiment of emancipation would depend on the fate of this bill.
- Her religious notions and home-grown prejudices were antagonistic to the complete emancipation of her intelligence.