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unshackle
[ uhn-shak-uhl ]
verb (used with object)
- to free from shackles; unfetter.
- to free from restraint, as conversation.
˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins
Origin of unshackle1
Example Sentences
The cuts have long been promised - McFadden told the BBC earlier this month that "radical" changes to the civil service were on the way, while the prime minister vowed reforms that would "unshackle" civil servants from "bureaucracy".
On Monday, Sir Keir wrote to civil servants to promise reforms that would unshackle them from bureaucracy and stop their talent being "constrained".
Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer has written to civil servants to promise reforms that will unshackle them from bureaucracy and stop their talent being "constrained", as he seeks to sell officials on plans to cut their jobs.
She began in the 1930s as a Surrealist mining the mysteries of human memory, but these exceptional abstract paintings fully unshackle imagination.
However, she still strongly emphasizes to Paul that she believes that only the Fremen can unshackle themselves – not an outside messiah or prophecy.
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