Dictionary
The liberate
verb
To free; to release from restraint or bondage; to set at liberty; to manumit; to disengage.
Exact(22)
The Liberate Tate campaign is a model for these pushes, and was born out of a workshop that the arts activist John Jordan gave at the Tate called 'Disobedience makes history' in 2009.
The LIBERATE trial was designed as a randomized, double-blind, multicenter trial to demonstrate that tibolone 2.5 mg/day (Livial®) is non-inferior to placebo regarding BC recurrence in women with vasomotor symptoms surgically treated for primary BC within the last 5 years.
The LIBERATE trial was funded by Schering-Plough (formerly NV Organon, Oss, The Netherlands).
The LIBERATE bone substudy, therefore, assessed the changes in BMD with tibolone and determined the relation between the effects on BMD and BC recurrence in this population.
Glen Tarman, a member of the Liberate Tate movement since its inception, said: "Art museums are places where we make sense of the world.
Charter, the St. Louis-based cable company owned by the Microsoft co-founder, Paul G. Allen, said it would use the Liberate software to offer interactive television services.
Similar(38)
Ultimately, he wrote, the liberating impulse surrenders to the grid.
We drove back to Hamdaniya, the liberated Christian town.
The function of air was merely to carry away the liberated phlogiston.
"We want the army to defend the liberated cities," says a member of the national council.
Nothing can undo the American blunders in Iraq that turned the liberated into the lacerated.
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