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All disimprison synonyms

dis·im·pris·on
D d

verb disimprison

  • oust — to expel or remove from a place or position occupied: The bouncer ousted the drunk; to oust the prime minister in the next election.
  • acquit — If someone is acquitted of a crime in a court of law, they are formally declared not to have committed the crime.
  • pardon — kind indulgence, as in forgiveness of an offense or discourtesy or in tolerance of a distraction or inconvenience: I beg your pardon, but which way is Spruce Street?
  • dismiss — to direct (an assembly of persons) to disperse or go: I dismissed the class early.
  • release — to lease again.
  • parole — language as manifested in the actual utterances produced by speakers of a language (contrasted with langue).
  • rescue — to free or deliver from confinement, violence, danger, or evil.
  • relieve — to ease or alleviate (pain, distress, anxiety, need, etc.).
  • discharge — to relieve of a charge or load; unload: to discharge a ship.
  • save — to rescue from danger or possible harm, injury, or loss: to save someone from drowning.
  • loosen — to unfasten or undo, as a bond or fetter.
  • clear — Something that is clear is easy to understand, see, or hear.
  • loose — free or released from fastening or attachment: a loose end.
  • unbind — to release from bonds or restraint, as a prisoner; free.
  • absolve — If a report or investigation absolves someone from blame or responsibility, it formally states that he or she is not guilty or is not to blame.
  • manumit — to release from slavery or servitude.
  • liberate — to set free, as from imprisonment or bondage.
  • unchain — to free from or as if from chains; set free.
  • ransomJohn Crowe [kroh] /kroʊ/ (Show IPA), 1888–1974, U.S. poet, critic, and teacher.
  • reprieve — to delay the impending punishment or sentence of (a condemned person).
  • demobilize — If a country or armed force demobilizes its troops, or if its troops demobilize, its troops are released from service and allowed to go home.
  • spring — String PRocessING language
  • deliver — If you deliver something somewhere, you take it there.
  • undo — to reverse the doing of; cause to be as if never done: Murder once done can never be undone.
  • disengage — to release from attachment or connection; loosen; unfasten: to disengage a clutch.
  • redeem — to buy or pay off; clear by payment: to redeem a mortgage.
  • untie — to loose or unfasten (anything tied); let or set loose by undoing a knot.
  • unleash — to release from or as if from a leash; set loose to pursue or run at will.
  • bail — Bail is a sum of money that an arrested person or someone else puts forward as a guarantee that the arrested person will attend their trial in a law court. If the arrested person does not attend it, the money will be lost.
  • unshackle — to free from shackles; unfetter.
  • bail out — If you bail someone out, you help them out of a difficult situation, often by giving them money.
  • cut loose — to free or become freed from restraint, custody, anchorage, etc
  • let off — to allow or permit: to let him escape.
  • turn out — to cause to move around on an axis or about a center; rotate: to turn a wheel.
  • disenthrall — to free from bondage; liberate: to be disenthralled from morbid fantasies.
  • let out — (of fur) processed by cutting parallel diagonal slashes into the pelt and sewing the slashed edges together to lengthen the pelt and to improve the appearance of the fur.
  • uncage — to set free from or as if from a cage; free from confinement or restraint.
  • unfetter — to release from fetters.
  • unfix — to render no longer fixed; unfasten; detach; loosen; free.
  • let go — to move or proceed, especially to or from something: They're going by bus.
  • demobilise — to disband (troops, an army, etc.).
  • free — enjoying personal rights or liberty, as a person who is not in slavery: a land of free people.
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