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  1. Dictionary
    re·lease
    /rəˈlēs/

    verb

    noun

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. 1. : to set free from restraint, confinement, or servitude. release hostages. release pent-up emotions. release the brakes. also : to let go : dismiss. released from her job. 2. : to relieve from something that confines, burdens, or oppresses. was released from her promise. 3. : to give up in favor of another : relinquish.

  3. RELEASE definition: 1. to give freedom or free movement to someone or something: 2. to move a device from a fixed…. Learn more.

  4. 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.

  5. noun. a freeing or releasing from confinement, obligation, pain, emotional strain, etc. Synonyms: emancipation, deliverance, liberation. liberation from anything that restrains or fastens. some device or agency for effecting such liberation. a grant of permission, as to publish, use, or sell something.

  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. RELEASE meaning: 1. to give freedom or free movement to someone or something: 2. to move a device from a fixed…. Learn more.

  8. release. verb. /rɪˈliːs/ Verb Forms. set somebody free. to let somebody come out of a place where they have been kept or stuck and unable to leave or move. release somebody to release a prisoner. The hostages were released unharmed. He was released without charge after questioning by police.

  9. RELEASE definition: 1. to allow a prisoner to be free: 2. to stop holding someone or something: 3. to let the public…. Learn more.

  10. free someone from duty. to free someone from a duty, responsibility, contract, etc. release somebody The club is releasing some of its older players. release somebody from something The new law released employers from their obligation to recognize unions. part of machine.

  11. [uncountable, singular] the act of making a film, recording or other product available to the public. The new software is planned for release in April. It is very difficult for a Brazilian film to get an American release. The film never received a theatrical release (= was not shown in cinemas).

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