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    Synonyms and Definitions

    Use "liberator" in a sentence

    liberator example sentences

    liberator


    1. I am still working on the Liberator


    2. Fidel Castro is coming to town! This poorly stylized villain, who for years has fed off the (romanticized) illusions conjured up by left-leaning individuals, will undoubtedly receive a warm reception in some quarters by disaffected groups whose alienated affections for this great nation have grown naturally disposed toward honoring every ideological enemy of America as some visionary liberator in their incorrectly perceived fight for ―freedom


    3. He stomped through the halls of OIJ headquarters in search of the liberator, but ran into a blank wall such as could be erected only via the intervention of higher echelon: there wasn’t an officer in the building willing to admit to any memory of Mr


    4. running and decided to return to his liberator


    5. Prayer to Saint Anthony of Padua, Liberator of


    6. Saint Anthony, Liberator of


    7. His speech in the court was hailed ‘as one of the most important ever delivered by a liberator of humankind’ by editors of New York Call (28 April 1922)


    8. Ah! How I missed then the relaxing Severa’s jasmine and orange tea! The sublime concoction that unleashed the ties of my mouth and made me scream from the rooftops the secrets of my soul! How I would appreciate having a good cup of that healing wonder! Spirit Pacificator! Revelations liberator!


    9. The Lieutenant broke his detail into squads and assigned one of the Liberator adults to each squad


    10. As she and Jesus were taking place in the jeep of the American captain, a big four-engine C-87 LIBERATOR EXPRESS, a cargo variant of the B-24 heavy bomber, came in and landed on the main runway of Clark Field

    11. Despite the distance, he identified them as being B-24 LIBERATOR heavy bombers, the most recent type of American bomber in service


    12. ‘’You are right, Admiral! These planes are C-87 LIBERATOR EXPRESS, a transport variant of the American B-24 bomber


    13. Instead of feeling like a liberator or savior, he had the distinct impression of rolling inside enemy territory


    14. This is what they called their B-17 Flying Fortress and B-24 Liberator whose massed firepower would provide collective protection


    15. of 40 ships were destroyed at Wolf 359; the Buran, the Ahwanee, the Liberator, the


    16. Guardian of the Gates; Liberator of the People; Holder of the Golden Shield of Zandor


    17. ” he confidently cited, as every liberator of the willingly captive has always promised those who neither want it nor seek it, but like to believe that ownership is the equivalent of


    18. To sculpt a living culture that generates transcendence is the dream of all idealists – for culture to be the endless liberator and not the new warden


    19. If money is what allows one's speech to be heard, then it is the liberator of speech


    20. If you cannot free yourself without money, then money is your liberator and master – to money your freedom is indebted

    21. It is a spark of liberty that put doubt in your mind, and doubt is a great liberator


    22. The headline of the most recent issue of The Liberator was in bold type so large that it took up nearly half the page, and it seemed to shout at the reader like a messenger carrying the worst news since Hannibal laid siege to Rome


    23. He threw open the ark and out burst the ghouls, screeching aggressively as they clawed past their unsuspecting liberator


    24. It is because Death is the liberator, not the conqueror, as so often is


    25. " Sancho had told the curate and the barber of the adventure of the galley slaves, which, so much to his glory, his master had achieved, and hence the curate in alluding to it made the most of it to see what would be said or done by Don Quixote; who changed colour at every word, not daring to say that it was he who had been the liberator of those worthy people


    26. What was the bond between these heroic souls and the soul of Captain Nemo? From this collection of portraits could I finally unravel the mystery of his existence? Was he a fighter for oppressed peoples, a liberator of enslaved races? Had he figured in the recent political or social upheavals of this century? Was he a hero of that dreadful civil war in America, a war lamentable yet forever glorious


    27. Peppino was a handsome young man of four or five and twenty, bronzed by the sun; he carried his head erect, and seemed on the watch to see on which side his liberator would appear


    28. Crewmen gave it a host of nicknames, among them “the Flying Brick,” “the Flying Boxcar,” and “the Constipated Lumberer,” a play on Consolidated Liberator


    29. Impossibly, Strong flew his Liberator eight hundred miles and landed


    30. Because the Liberator didn’t have the range to make the three-thousand-mile round-trip between Saipan and Japan’s home islands, the captives must have believed that winning Saipan was only a preliminary step to establishing an island base within bomber range of mainland Japan

    31. Charlie Tilghman, who flies a restored B-24 for the Commemorative Air Force, taught me about flying the Liberator


    32. As the great Liberator Bolivar had said in the bitterness of his spirit, "America is ungovernable


    33. The angel had conquered the demon, and, strange to say, that which made her shudder from head to foot was the fact that this angel, this liberator, was the very man whom she abhorred, that mayor whom she had so long regarded as the author of all her woes, that Madeleine! And at the very moment when she had insulted him in so hideous a fashion, he had saved her! Had she, then, been mistaken? Must she change her whole soul? She did not know; she trembled


    34. What! This man was that Thenardier, that innkeeper of Montfermeil whom he had so long and so vainly sought! He had found him at last, and how? His father's saviour was a ruffian! That man, to whose service Marius was burning to devote himself, was a monster! That liberator of Colonel Pontmercy was on the point of committing a crime whose scope Marius did not, as yet, clearly comprehend, but which resembled an assassination! And against whom, great God! what a fatality! What a bitter mockery of fate! His father had commanded him from the depths of his coffin to do all the good in his power to this Thenardier, and for four years Marius had cherished no other thought than to acquit this debt of his father's, and at the moment when he was on the eve of having a brigand seized in the very act of crime by justice, destiny cried to him: "This is Thenardier!" He could at last


    35. Outside the pale of that holy thing, justice, by what right does one form of man despise another? By what right should the sword of Washington disown the pike of Camille Desmoulins? Leonidas against the stranger, Timoleon against the tyrant, which is the greater? the one is the defender, the other the liberator


    36. The Civil and Military Commander of the city, who had been advised of her arrival, invited her for a drive in the official Victoria while the train was preparing to leave for San Pedro Alejandrino, which she wanted to visit in order to see for herself if what they said was true, that the bed in which The Liberator had died was as small as a child’s


    37. Fermina Daza was terrified when they reached their destination, and she just had time to marvel at the Homeric tamarinds where The Liberator had hung his dying man’s hammock and to confirm that the bed where he had died, just as they had said, was small not only for so glorious a man but even for a sevenmonth-old infant


    38. The first was that The Liberator had carried him in his arms in the village of Turbaco when he was making his ill-fated journey toward death


    39. She had seen them flying very low and performing acrobatic maneuvers on the centenary of the death of The Liberator


    40. It was in the darkest days of serfdom at the beginning of the century, and long live the Liberator of the People! There was in those days a general of aristocratic connections, the owner of great estates, one of those men—somewhat exceptional, I believe, even then—who, retiring from the service into a life of leisure, are convinced that they've earned absolute power over the lives of their subjects

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    "liberator" definitions

    someone who releases people from captivity or bondage