lib·er·ty
n. pl. lib·er·ties
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- The condition of being free from restriction or control.
- The right and power to act, believe, or express oneself
in a manner of one's own choosing.
- The condition of being physically and legally free from
confinement, servitude, or forced labor. See Synonyms (below).
- Freedom from unjust or undue governmental control.
- A right or immunity to engage in certain actions without control
or interference: the liberties protected by the Bill of
Rights.
-
- A breach or overstepping of propriety or social
convention. Often used in the plural.
- A statement, attitude, or action not warranted by
conditions or actualities: a historical novel that takes
liberties with chronology.
- An unwarranted risk; a chance: took foolish
liberties on the ski slopes.
Idiom: at
liberty
- Not in confinement or under constraint; free.
- Not employed, occupied, or in use.
[Middle English liberte, from Old French, from Latin
libertas from liber, free. See leudh- in Indo-European Roots.]
Synonyms: freedom, liberty, license --
These nouns refer to the power to
act, speak, or think without externally imposed restraints. Freedom is the most
general term: “In giving freedom to the slave, we assure freedom to the free”
(Abraham Lincoln). Liberty stresses the power of free choice: “liberty, perfect
liberty, to think, feel, do just as one pleases” (William Hazlitt). License
sometimes denotes deliberate deviation from normally applicable rules or
practices to achieve a desired effect: poetic license. Frequently, though, it
denotes undue freedom: “the intolerable license with which the newspapers
break... the rules of decorum” (Edmund Burke).
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