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  1. Dictionary
    manumit
    /ˌmanjʊˈmɪt/

    verb

    • 1. release from slavery; set free: historical "old Angus had never manumitted a single slave"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. The meaning of MANUMIT is to release from slavery. How to use manumit in a sentence. Did you know? Synonym Discussion of Manumit.

  3. Manumit definition: to release from slavery or servitude.. See examples of MANUMIT used in a sentence.

  4. to free from slavery, servitude, etc; emancipate. Collins English Dictionary. Copyright © HarperCollins Publishers. Derived forms. manumitter (ˌmanuˈmitter) noun. Word origin. C15: from Latin manūmittere to release, from manū from one's hand + ēmittere to send away.

  5. To manumit is to set free, or to release a slave from slavery. During slavery in the United States, it was rare for a slave owner to manumit his slaves. Manumit comes from a Latin word meaning “set forth from the hand,” which happens when a slave owner frees a slave.

  6. Mar 28, 2024 · manumit (third-person singular simple present manumits, present participle manumitting, simple past and past participle manumitted) To release from slavery, to free. Synonyms: emancipate, liberate

  7. Define manumit. manumit synonyms, manumit pronunciation, manumit translation, English dictionary definition of manumit. tr.v. man·u·mit·ted , man·u·mit·ting , man·u·mits To free from slavery or bondage; emancipate. man′u·mis′sion n. man′u·mit′ter n.

  8. Synonyms for MANUMIT: free, release, liberate, rescue, emancipate, enfranchise, save, loosen; Antonyms of MANUMIT: restrain, confine, bind, fetter, jail, commit, shackle, enchain.

  9. A complete guide to the word "MANUMIT": definitions, pronunciations, synonyms, grammar insights, collocations, examples, and translations.

  10. Manumit definition: To free from slavery or bondage; emancipate.

  11. The earliest known use of the noun manumit is in the mid 1600s. OED's only evidence for manumit is from 1637, in the writing of George Sandys, writer and traveller.