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  1. Dictionary
    unshackled
    /ʌnˈʃakld/

    adjective

    • 1. not chained or shackled: "he had handcuffs on his wrists but his feet were unshackled"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. un· shack· le ˌən-ˈsha-kəl. unshackled; unshackling; unshackles. Synonyms of unshackle. transitive verb. : to free from shackles. Examples of unshackle in a Sentence.

  3. unshackled. If something is unshackled, it's set freeanything confining it is loosened. When a guard removes the handcuffs from a prisoner's wrists, the prisoner is unshackled.

  4. Unshackle definition: to free from shackles; unfetter.. See examples of UNSHACKLE used in a sentence.

  5. Definition of 'unshackle' Word Frequency. unshackle in British English. (ʌnˈʃækəl ) verb (transitive) 1. to set free from restrictions. It unshackles the mind from petty prejudices. 2. to remove shackles from. He unshackled the prisoners. Collins English Dictionary. Copyright © HarperCollins Publishers. Word Frequency.

  6. 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. American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition.

  7. Jan 16, 2023 · unshackle (third-person singular simple present unshackles, present participle unshackling, simple past and past participle unshackled) To remove shackles from someone or something. The captain ordered that the guards unshackle and release the prisoner, as he had served his sentence.

  8. Synonyms for UNSHACKLED: liberated, unchained, emancipated, unbound, enfranchised, unfettered, freed, manumitted; Antonyms of UNSHACKLED: constrained, restrained, controlled, governed, contained, regulated, held, inhibited