English language

How to pronounce emancipator in English?

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Type Words
Synonyms manumitter
Type of liberator
Derivation emancipate

Examples of emancipator

emancipator
Part two of the conference focused on Lincoln's international view as an emancipator and liberator.
From the en.wikipedia.org
She became the most active emancipator in Petersburg of that time, buying the freedom of at least 16 slaves.
From the inrich.com
He becomes a Gladiator-like national emancipator, protecting England from civil war and restoring the nation to glory once more.
From the boston.com
Of special importance is Olaudah Equiano's daughter Joanna Vassa, her father being a leading African slavery emancipator of the period.
From the en.wikipedia.org
Near the finish line, we run into Natural Beauty, an 11-minute, hymnlike meditation that portrays man as both emancipator and destroyer of the earth.
From the kentucky.com
They rejoice in dance and praise Dorothy as their emancipator and the Flying Monkeys give her and her friends a triumphant ride back to the Emerald City.
From the en.wikipedia.org
He stuck around, assuming ever more responsibilities, eventually joining an ownership group that included Branch Rickey, the game's foremost executive and its great emancipator.
From the nytimes.com
As ever with these discussions, there is a tendency to read modernity as a great emancipator and the past as a dark unhappy place from which we are lucky and privileged to have escaped.
From the guardian.co.uk
Why don't you share your theory with us why Barack Obama's 180 degree turn in MidEast policy from great emancipator to apologist for apartheid is motivated by a desire to suck up to poor blacks.
From the economist.com
More examples
  • Someone who frees others from bondage; "Lincoln is known as the Great Emancipator"
  • Emancipation is a broad term used to describe various efforts to obtain political rights or equality, often for a specifically disenfranchised group, or more generally in discussion of such matters. Emancipation stems from "ex manus capere": 'take out of the hand".
  • Originally founded in 1819 by Elihu Embree, the son of a Quaker minister, as the Manumission Intelligencier, The Emancipator was an abolitionist newspaper. It was renamed in 1820 and then sold to Benjamin Lundy in 1821 when it became The Genius of Universal Emancipation.
  • A person who emancipates