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- RELEASING | English meaning - Cambridge Dictionary
RELEASING definition: 1 present participle of release 2 to give freedom or free movement to someone or something: 3… Learn more
- RELEASE Definition Meaning - Merriam-Webster
The meaning of RELEASE is to set free from restraint, confinement, or servitude; also : to let go : dismiss How to use release in a sentence Synonym Discussion of Release
- Releasing - definition of releasing by The Free Dictionary
To cause or allow to move away or spread from a source or place of confinement: cells that release histamine d To make available for use: released the funds for the project 2 a To set free from obligations, commitments, or debt: released them from their contract b To relieve of care or suffering: Only death could release him from suffering
- Releasing - Definition, Meaning Synonyms | Vocabulary. com
releasing Definitions of releasing adjective emotionally purging (of e g art) synonyms: cathartic
- What does Releasing mean? - Definitions. net
Releasing refers to the act of letting go, freeing, or making something available This could pertain to various contexts such as releasing a person from an obligation, releasing a new product or information into the market or public, or releasing a substance into the environment
- RELEASE Definition Meaning | Dictionary. com
noun a freeing or releasing from confinement, obligation, pain, emotional strain, etc Synonyms: emancipation, deliverance, liberation liberation from anything that restrains or fastens some device or agency for effecting such liberation a grant of permission, as to publish, use, or sell something
- RELEASING Synonyms: 261 Similar and Opposite Words - Merriam-Webster
Synonyms for RELEASING: unleashing, loosening, unlocking, expressing, letting go, loosing, uncorking, airing; Antonyms of RELEASING: containing, holding, controlling, regulating, checking, restraining, governing, inhibiting
- RELEASE | definition in the Cambridge English Dictionary
be released from something into something Hormones are released from glands into the bloodstream He punched the pillow in an effort to release his anger Their appeals to release the hostages fell on deaf ears Note how easy it is to release the catch quickly The prisoner has been released for humanitarian reasons
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