What we see is a girl who suddenly grasps the point of taking control and finds it liberating. |
|
There's something fantastically liberating in the licence she gives you to laugh at subjects usually out of bounds. |
|
Joly came of age in the liberating turmoil of the 1960s in France, but her story was one of ambition rather than anarchy. |
|
Well, I mean, the press was led in right behind the troops who were liberating those places. |
|
The effect is liberating in that it emphasizes communal trends while extracting the artistic production from its national compartments. |
|
Nevertheless, there's a sense of daring and freedom here that is liberating. |
|
In the grand process of liberating herself, she only ends up aping the male. |
|
Widespread opposition to a proposed Afghan law is less about liberating women than shoring up Western authority. |
|
Studying at teachers college and the University of Dunedin during World War II was both liberating and terrifying. |
|
A materialist understanding is an essential step in liberating culture from the stranglehold of commodification. |
|
When you've been trapped in the shackles of ballet most of your life, escaping to the world of contemporary dance can be liberating. |
|
Too bad the actor does not believe in liberating people from the forces of evil in the real world. |
|
You thought the Left went berko last year, what with all that liberating, capturing, and cooperation? |
|
Writers saw something captivating about trains and the potentially liberating but traumatising experience of riding in them. |
|
The text, in its subversion of racial and cultural purity, posits miscegenation and hybridity as potentially positive, even liberating, forces. |
|
If the call to faith is to be liberating, faith must be understood as trust rather than as belief. |
|
Thank you for coming and helping us and liberating us, but that doesn't mean shunting us to the sides. |
|
There is something liberating in the familiar keyboard inflections, earnest handclaps and muted but driving drums. |
|
Many designers seemed to have succumbed to the liberating qualities of plastic, neoprene and PVC, with varying degrees of success. |
|
When she turned up her nose, Kottler approached her coworker only to face rejection again, but this time, he found the brush-off liberating. |
|
|
The honesty and openness of her words are oftentimes scary, yet somehow surprisingly liberating. |
|
It was really liberating to me when I found out how many men do find squishiness hawt. |
|
Interestingly, the show's mockumentary format is liberating for the straight man. |
|
A materialist understanding is, instead, an essential step in liberating culture from the stranglehold of commodification. |
|
Its emphasis on the self-regulating and potentially liberating character of traditional law is often overdrawn. |
|
For an older generation, the conciliar experience was profoundly liberating. |
|
Expanding debate and liberating speech is at least implicit in the mandate of any university governing body. |
|
In part, it is a way of putting our capabilities for liberating ourselves from the colonialist yoke to the test. |
|
Had not the years of turmoil affected those to whom appeals had been made about liberating the common fatherland from a tyrant? |
|
The American Fenians then organized an abortive attack upon Canada, a rather devious way of liberating Ireland. |
|
I found my relationships with long time friends strengthening after liberating myself from years of secrecy and insecurity. |
|
The silly, liberating antics expected on such occasions escalate at intervals into orgiastic nastiness. |
|
At times her story is invigoratingly liberating, at others it's tinged with sadness. |
|
You're full of sensationally liberating ideas, but this week other people may be slow to cotton on. |
|
This was a life-affirming, emotionally and intellectually liberating message, and it took courage and conviction to be the messenger. |
|
Its proponents claim it's a difficult but liberating discipline, which can take years to learn. |
|
In Britain, the experience of the revolution had a liberating effect on people's minds. |
|
This encomium of praise for the liberating Romans was soon replaced by a rather different view in mainstream Judean opinion. |
|
It's been very liberating as it's a much more fluid design process than something like a Noel Coward drawing-room comedy. |
|
So for many immigrants, there's something liberating about the guiltless American attitude toward patriotism. |
|
|
There is something liberating about going into a travel agent and saying that I want to go away in three days and just picking a hotel out of a hat. |
|
Successive choreographers have found the artform's freedom liberating, but they have either struggled to find a shared set of rules or deliberately avoided them. |
|
Can he explain the secret formula that enables a select group of men and women to turn a good performance into something memorable and liberating? |
|
I was successful in liberating a total of 16 chocolate eggs from your clutches, notwithstanding additional emergency supplies in the form of mini eggs, buttons and cake. |
|
Beyond the political swing vote, however, more important and more fundamental to liberating ourselves from dependence is creating an intellectual center. |
|
For most people, these changes are extremely liberating, and marriages that succeed can be much more rewarding and fulfilling than those of the past. |
|
It came to feel in some ways like a forward-thinking message that was liberating for a lot of members of those congregations. |
|
Virginia's book was liberating for me, because its alternate taxonomy helped me avoid unwittingly imposing artificial political identities on my own thinking. |
|
This wider cultural and historical perspective is important to Walker's novel because the form of knowledge that it offers is vitally liberating and empowering. |
|
It would have been inexpressibly cathartic had India, after liberating Hyderabad in September 1948, captured and tried the Nizam. |
|
In Renaissance Italy, he became a student of Titian in Venice, liberating himself from the conventions of icon painting and developing a new fluency with brush and color. |
|
Masked parties have an amazingly liberating effect on people, and making the surroundings a little surreal also helps transport your guests to party land. |
|
I had a relationship after my marriage that really explored power play, and it was the most passionate, powerful, liberating thing I have ever experienced in my life. |
|
We Marxists consider the tactic of individual terror inexpedient in the tasks of the liberating struggle of the proletariat as well as oppressed nationalities. |
|
I pay particular tribute to the trades unions and union learning representatives who are genuinely liberating the lives of so many of their members. |
|
Other poems present maternal love as liberating, not possessive. |
|
I broke away from Andrew suddenly, in a liberating gesture of defiance. |
|
All have sought ways to construct complex three-dimensional building forms devised with the liberating influence of new computer modeling systems. |
|
Brenda Maddox, who had written a biography of Thatcher to accompany the programme, credits Dennis Thatcher with liberating his wife from her repressive background. |
|
Going to pieces can be liberating, she realizes, perhaps even more liberating than finding work on an assembly line. |
|
|
As Kurdish leaders acknowledge, liberating Mosul is beyond the capability of the peshmerga and government forces will be needed. |
|
Instead of breaking the power of the clergy and the landowners and liberating the religious and national minorities, they relied on oppression and chauvinism. |
|
Although criticised by many at that time for being too soft, it was in essence a policy based on realism and aimed at liberating India to play a larger role in the world. |
|
Darkly pessimistic towards the end, he despaired of ever liberating art from the art world. |
|
Gamma rays and X-rays lose energy in a variety of ways, but each involves liberating atomic electrons, which then deposit energy through interactions with other electrons. |
|
Access to worldwide information resources is exhilarating and liberating. |
|
Politically, republicanism and anticlericalism kept the liberating mission of the Revolution alive, though this appealed more to rebels than to foreign governments. |
|
Four dozen faces and no eye contact is a little disconcerting, but liberating, too. |
|
This week's secretive populace have embraced the concept that silence is golden, so liberating information could be about as easy as extracting Excalibur from the rock. |
|
Bolivar was left in charge of fully liberating Peru while San Martin retired from politics after the first parliament was assembled. |
|
In addition, it exhibits a strong dehydrating property on carbohydrates, liberating extra heat and causing secondary thermal burns. |
|
Religious practice and action can be liberating, and can connect displaced people with the spirits of home. |
|
Afterwards, Moscow took the leading role in liberating Russia from Mongol domination. |
|
On 13 June, Taliban fighters demonstrated their ongoing strength, liberating all prisoners in Kandahar jail. |
|
In the hours following the liberation, members of the British liberating forces were obliged to intervene to prevent revenge attacks. |
|
His experience of writing for film is similar, offering the liberating opportunity to 'play God', in control of creative reality. |
|
The bifurcated look had something weirdly haremlike about it and, however liberating, was light only in relation to what had come before. |
|
The silanol groups react with carbinol groups on the alkyd, liberating water which must be removed to drive the reaction toward completion. |
|
The rediscovery of classical Greek and Roman knowledge had an enormous liberating effect on intellectuals. |
|
For him, then, the only truly liberating response is a Lacanian act, an attack on the fundamental fantasy of our current social configuration. |
|
|
The Theravada tradition regards insight into the four truths as liberating in itself. |
|
From the very beginning Pan-Africanists spoke of liberating Africa and restoring the continent to its former power and glory. |
|
This internal power struggle contributed to the success of the liberating army. |
|
His move away from easel painting and conventionality was a liberating signal to the artists of his era and to all who came after. |
|
An estimated 140,000 Soviet soldiers died in liberating Czechoslovakia from German rule. |
|
She traces the broad spectrum of feminist typologies by beginning with Lutheran laywoman Rachel Conrad Wahlberg's books revealing Jesus' liberating attitude toward women. |
|
Despite the Bush administration's stated interest in liberating Iraq, little formal movement towards an invasion occurred until the September 11 attacks. |
|
The Kingdom of Sardinia again attacked the Austrian Empire in the Second Italian War of Independence of 1859, with the aid of France, resulting in liberating Lombardy. |
|
In some versions, Heracles instead built the two great Pillars of Hercules to hold the sky away from the earth, liberating Atlas much as he liberated Prometheus. |
|
To them, the Moors were perceived as, and indeed were, a liberating force. |
|
Simon Bolivar launched his campaign from the north liberating the Viceroyalty of New Granada in the Battles of Carabobo in 1821 and Pichincha a year later. |
|
By absorbing the nitrogen oxide gas, the compound forms an iron nitrosyl complex that can be converted into ammonia, thus liberating the iron catalyst for further use. |
|
But whatever the Russians may have felt about Shakespear, his superiors were delighted by the way he had so skilfully spiked the Tsar's guns by liberating his subjects. |
|
Frank Hobson found something liberating in his unkemptitude. |
|
In response to the critical view that such ideals are antifeminist, Weaver-Zercher argues that Amish novels are liberating in that they privilege the experience of women. |
|
However Charles de Gaulle had no intention of liberating the colonies. |
|
Enlightenment, understood in the widest sense as the advance of thought, has always aimed at liberating human beings from fear and installing them as masters. |
|
In the Pali Canon liberating insight is attained in the fourth dhyana. |
|
Satanism is a broad term referring to diverse beliefs that share a symbolic association with, or admiration for, Satan, who is seen as a liberating figure. |
|
Her marriage had failed, and she was jobless with a dependent child, but she described her failure as liberating and allowing her to focus on writing. |
|