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  1. RELEASED definition: 1. past simple and past participle of release 2. to give freedom or free movement to someone or…. Learn more.

  2. The information has been released in dribs and drabs. A new mix of their hit single is due to be released early next month. We cannot release the names of the soldiers who were killed until we have informed their next of kin. Police blundered by not releasing more details about the case to focus public interest. They've just released a CD of ...

  3. 2. : to relieve from something that confines, burdens, or oppresses. was released from her promise. 3. : to give up in favor of another : relinquish. release a claim to property. 4. : to give permission for publication, performance, exhibition, or sale of. also : to make available to the public.

  4. Synonyms for RELEASED: delivered, freed, liberated, quit, shut (of), unburdened, free, disencumbered; Antonyms of RELEASED: hindered, handicapped, encumbered, hobbled, contained, held, checked, controlled.

  5. To set free from physical restraint or binding; let go: released the balloons; released the brake. c. To cause or allow to move away or spread from a source or place of confinement: cells that release histamine.

  6. To release something or someone is to set it free, like a caged animal or a prisoner. “I shall be released” is a famous refrain from a 1967 Bob Dylan song that has come to symbolize political freedom around the world.

  7. Definition of release verb in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.

  8. release /rɪˈlis/ v., -leased, -leas•ing, n. v. [ ~ + object] to free from jail, burden, debt, pain, etc.; to let go. to allow to be known, issued, published, broadcast, or exhibited: to release an article for publication.

  9. to make (news or information) known or allow (news or information) to be made known. to release details of an agreement. law to relinquish (a right, claim, title, etc) in favour of someone else. ethology to evoke (a response) through the presentation of a stimulus that produces the response innately.

  10. SYNONYMS 1. loose, deliver. release, free, dismiss, discharge, liberate, emancipate may all mean to set at liberty, let loose, or let go. release and free, when applied to persons, suggest a helpful action.

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