emancipator 的定义
e·man·ci·pat·ed, e·man·ci·pat·ing.
- to free from restraint, influence, or the like.
- to free from bondage or slavery.
- Roman and Civil Law. to terminate paternal control over.
emancipator 近义词
liberator
更多emancipator例句
- When he finally self-emancipated, it was from Mount Vernon, on the president’s 65th birthday in 1797.
- She makes her first scars on the world as an Emancipator, a blond Spartacist, Abe Lincoln with dragons.
- The great emancipator is featured sparingly, emerging dramatically through the mist at the top of the ad.
- The son of the Great Emancipator was notoriously hostile to pleas from black Americans to integrate the service on his cars.
- Yes, the Great Emancipator used his first inaugural to call on his countrymen to heed “the better angels of our nature.”
- The 16th president did not come out of the cradle as the Great Emancipator.
- He was, as every one knows, a most horrible despot with his serfs, though he gave himself out for an emancipator.
- He, however, declined the honor, whereupon the name of the South American emancipator was chosen.
- The Admiral who had thus triumphed was hailed as Emancipator.
- Upon Mr. B.'s assertion that Mr. Thompson's testimonies were of this worthless character, the Emancipator has the following note.
- Liberty was always the great emancipator's leading thought, and it breathes and glows in all his statutes concerning pauperism.