Dictionary
the liberating
verb
To free; to release from restraint or bondage; to set at liberty; to manumit; to disengage.
Exact(58)
Ultimately, he wrote, the liberating impulse surrenders to the grid.
For a play about the liberating power of art, it feels constricted and contrived.
Becoming "Ken Wiwa", however, was not the liberating experience he had hoped for.
The liberating force of this belated coming out finds expression in The Habit of Art.
(Once, I was defending the liberating boom of the African Pentecostal movement).
She continually reminds herself of the liberating aspect of it all.
An early book, driven by high spirits, happiness & the liberating spirit of the times.
Drummer Harvey Mason is the liberating force, driving the album's four tracks with precision and elan.
Ballard's conversation, like his writing, is regularly punctuated with inventories of the liberating spirit of technology.
Some early Christians were themselves slaves and could no doubt relate to the liberating concept.
Lee can sound almost evangelical when he talks about the liberating power of technology.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com