The event of setting (someone or something) free (e.g. hostages, slaves, prisoners, caged animals, hooked or stuck mechanisms).
The word "release" is correct and usable in written English. It can be used as a verb meaning to give permission or set free, or as a noun meaning permission or a set of items being released to the public. Example sentence: The record label released the new album this week, and it quickly rose to the top of the charts.
And in the meantime the authorities should grant him temporary release so that he can receive the medical treatment that he so urgently needs".
It's certainly not true that it found "only a quarter [of LGBT people] would wed", as the Mail said in its headline – and Catholic Voices said in their press release.
Clinton said on Tuesday she supported the swift release of her emails amid reports that the State Department would not publicly release them all until January 2016.
Really a computer runs the ride and a member of staff just presses a button to release the cars from the station.
In last week's release Populaire, the suave Romain Duris character is asked to stop smoking in the office by the new secretary, played by Déborah François.
During the subsequent eight years, the question of what sort of music it is appropriate for an Idol winner to record and release has been front and centre of Clarkson's career.
Whether the action's beneficiaries in the streets below appreciated the reference to the Supreme Court's Citizens United ruling was not recorded, but in a press release, activists did claim that a woman who had been trying to collect money for a bus ride was able to pay her fare with the free money.
Awesome tool! I started using it one year ago and I never had to look for another app
Ha Thuy Vy
MA of Applied Linguistic, Maquarie University, Australia