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    Un·shack·le
    /ˌənˈSHak(ə)l/

    verb

    • 1. release from shackles, chains, or other physical restraints: "they were unshackled and released"
  2. Jan 16, 2023 · To remove shackles from someone or something. The captain ordered that the guards unshackle and release the prisoner, as he had served his sentence. The sooner the railway can unshackle itself from DfT the better. To remove restrictions or inhibitions; to allow full freedom and power .

  3. 6 days ago · unshackle in American English. (ʌnˈʃækəl ) verb transitive Word forms: unˈshackled or unˈshackling. 1. to loosen or remove the shackles from. 2. to free. Webster’s New World College Dictionary, 4th Edition. Copyright © 2010 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt.

  4. Define unshackle. unshackle synonyms, unshackle pronunciation, unshackle translation, English dictionary definition of unshackle. tr.v. un·shack·led , un·shack·ling , un·shack·les 1. To remove the shackles from. 2. To free; liberate: unshackled him from conventional thinking.

  5. 35,000 worksheets, games, and lesson plans. If something is unshackled, it's set free — anything confining it is loosened. When a guard removes the handcuffs from a prisoner's wrists, the prisoner is unshackled.

  6. unshackle. [ uhn- shak- uhl ] show ipa. See synonyms for unshackle on Thesaurus.com. verb (used with object), un·shack·led, un·shack·ling. to free from shackles; unfetter. to free from restraint, as conversation. Recommended videos. Powered by AnyClip.

  7. There are three meanings listed in OED's entry for the verb unshackle. See ‘Meaning & use’ for definitions, usage, and quotation evidence.

  8. Britannica Dictionary definition of UNSHACKLE. [+ object] : to take shackles or handcuffs off (someone) He unshackled the prisoner. — often used figuratively. We need to unshackle our creativity. UNSHACKLE meaning: to take shackles or handcuffs off (someone) often used figuratively.

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