Concept cluster: Tasks > Emancipation
n
(historical, often capitalised, Australia) The ending of convict transportation.
n
(rare) State of being acquainted; degree of acquaintance.
n
(historical) A freed (manumitted) black person in one of France's colonies, especially Haiti.
n
The state of being a chav
n
The abstraction of a child from its parents.
n
The state of being thus set free; liberation (used, for example, of slaves from bondage, of a person from prejudices, of the mind from superstition, of a nation from tyranny or subjugation).
n
Alternative form of emancipist [(Australia, historical) In penal colonies of early Australia, a convict who had been pardoned for good conduct; sometimes inclusively a convict whose sentence had completed, though one such was more usually called an expiree.]
n
Alternative form of Exod.
n
Close or habitual acquaintance with someone or something; understanding or recognition acquired from experience.
n
(rare) The state of being a foundling.
n
(historical, US) An immigrant to the United States who, upon arrival, voluntarily became an indentured servant.
n
A man who has been released from a condition of slavery.
n
The condition of being a freedman.
n
(US) An African-American municipality or community built by freedmen, former slaves who were emancipated during and after the American Civil War.
n
(historical) The rights and privileges enjoyed by the freemen of medieval cities (their "citizens"), but not by outsiders, bondsmen, or others.
n
Archaic spelling of freedom. [(uncountable) The state of being free, of not being imprisoned or enslaved.]
n
A person who has been released from a condition of slavery.
n
(rare or nonstandard) The state or condition of being free; freedom.
n
(usually historical) A person who is not a serf or slave.
n
The state of being a freeman.
n
friendship and cooperation with, and noninterference in the internal affairs of another country
n
An outsider who moves to a community or a place; (used by those who consider themselves to be its original inhabitants).
n
(rare) The state or condition of an inmate.
n
A usually socially conservative member of the working class whose income is stagnating or falling in purchasing power.
n
(historical) A free (not enslaved) black person in a French- or Spanish-colonized area, especially New Orleans.
n
(obsolete) Slavery.
n
The state or condition of being military.
n
A nikkei; a Japanese immigrant or descendant not resident in Japan.
n
The status or attitudes of the sans-culottes.
n
A region of the world in which large-scale use of violence, such as war, among nations is highly unlikely.
n
(US, law, uncountable) The legal requirement that under specified circumstances, a juvenile be tried as an adult, without the possibility of judicial discretion.
n
(rare) The state or condition of being a surrogate.
n
(historical) A person lacking freedom, such as a tenant bound to a manor.
n
A customer, job applicant or similar who visits a restaurant, medical facility, car dealership, etc. without a reservation, appointment, or referral.
n
Initialism of white privilege. [(sociology) The collective advantages that white people are granted and enjoy in a society, usually apart from demonstrable merit, as contrasted against the advantages (or lack thereof) of non-whites of the same society.]

Note: Concept clusters like the one above are an experimental OneLook feature. We've grouped words and phrases into thousands of clusters based on a statistical analysis of how they are used in writing. Some of the words and concepts may be vulgar or offensive. The names of the clusters were written automatically and may not precisely describe every word within the cluster; furthermore, the clusters may be missing some entries that you'd normally associate with their names. Click on a word to look it up on OneLook.
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