unshackle

Example Sentences

Examples are automatically compiled from online sources to show current usage. Read More Opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback.
Recent Examples of unshackle The administration will likely attempt to unshackle Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the mortgage guarantors, from their current position as wards of the state, Andrea Riquier reports. Daniel De Visé, USA TODAY, 18 Feb. 2025 Now, unshackled from those responsibilities and likely headed for the chamber’s exit doors, the 82-year-old is increasingly irking his GOP colleagues while offering Democrats welcomed surprises after bucking a high-profile trio of President Donald Trump’s nominees. Ramsey Touchberry, Washington Examiner - Political News and Conservative Analysis About Congress, the President, and the Federal Government, 14 Feb. 2025 That year’s Macy’s Fourth of July fireworks display used the song to unshackle a city imprisoned by a pandemic. Alice George, Smithsonian Magazine, 7 Feb. 2025 Buckeyes faithful — scarlet-clad, drunken, frigid from the cold — were finally unshackled from all those losses to Michigan and all those unmet expectations. Justin Williams, The Athletic, 21 Jan. 2025 See All Example Sentences for unshackle
Recent Examples of Synonyms for unshackle
Verb
  • The policies announced on Liberation Day seem unlikely to liberate investors and business folk from their fears.
    John Cassidy, New Yorker, 3 Apr. 2025
  • Avoiding the dilemma of either yielding to Russian nuclear threats and allowing the loss of NATO territory or risking nuclear escalation in attempting to liberate NATO territory would require conventional defenses capable of halting a Russian incursion at the border.
    Mark S. Bell, Foreign Affairs, 31 Mar. 2025
Verb
  • At the age of 14, Culkin emancipated himself from his parents.
    Janelle Ash, Fox News, 14 Mar. 2025
  • The mother-daughter duo went their separate ways when Drew was emancipated at the age of 14.
    Nicole Briese, People.com, 22 Feb. 2025
Verb
  • When Henson refused to unchain herself from the fence, California Highway Patrol arrested her.
    Kate Talerico, The Mercury News, 7 Aug. 2024
  • Max eventually unchains himself and helps Furiosa in her quest to free the cult leader's wives, gaining mutual respect along the way.
    EW Staff, EW.com, 3 July 2024
Verb
  • As spring ends, maple trees begin to unfetter winged seeds that flutter and swirl from branches to land gently on the ground.
    Nikk Ogasa, Scientific American, 22 Sep. 2021
  • His long run in office, however, delivered only partial victories on his two primary ambitions: to unfetter Japan’s military after decades of postwar pacifism and to jump-start and overhaul its economy through a program known as Abenomics.
    New York Times, New York Times, 8 July 2022
Verb
  • Thus enfranchised, Hackman took on Richard Harris’ elegant killer English Bob with gusto, mixing in a bravura oratorical gavotte with ample kicks to the ribs, and summoning the Best Supporting Actor trophy.
    Fred Schruers, IndieWire, 27 Feb. 2025
  • After the Third Reform Act of 1884, six of 10 adult Englishmen were enfranchised.
    Geoffrey Wheatcroft, New York Times, 18 Jan. 2025
Verb
  • But for Buddhists, dying is an opportunity to unbind from the past and start again.
    Amanda Whiting, Vulture, 16 Mar. 2025
  • The book was centered on the idea that Russia’s geography is its fate and that there is nothing any ruler can do to unbind himself from the necessities of securing his lands.
    Anton Barbashin, Foreign Affairs, 31 Mar. 2014
Verb
  • Events unmoor themselves from context.
    Elizabeth Nelson, New York Times, 6 Oct. 2021
  • From the death of her father at 13 to her mother's refusal to take in Owusu and her sister afterward, the author navigates hardships and searches for identity, eventually pulling herself back together following a breakdown that threatens to unmoor her.
    Toni Fitzgerald, Forbes, 8 June 2021
Verb
  • Tubman’s father had been manumitted by his owner, but Brodess had inherited Tubman, hiring her and her siblings out to neighbors for seasonal work, whether trapping muskrats or clearing land.
    Casey Cep, The New Yorker, 24 June 2024
  • Grant would manumit his one enslaved servant, William Jones, in 1859.
    Harold Holzer, WSJ, 1 Jan. 2024

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Cite this Entry

“Unshackle.” Merriam-Webster.com Thesaurus, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/thesaurus/unshackle. Accessed 16 Apr. 2025.

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