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All manumit antonyms

man·u·mit
M m

verb manumit

  • employ — Give work to (someone) and pay them for it.
  • engage — Occupy, attract, or involve (someone's interest or attention).
  • condemn — If you condemn something, you say that it is very bad and unacceptable.
  • damn — Damn, damn it, and dammit are used by some people to express anger or impatience.
  • punish — to subject to pain, loss, confinement, death, etc., as a penalty for some offense, transgression, or fault: to punish a criminal.
  • harm — a U.S. air-to-surface missile designed to detect and destroy radar sites by homing on their emissions.
  • injure — to do or cause harm of any kind to; damage; hurt; impair: to injure one's hand.
  • blame — If you blame a person or thing for something bad, you believe or say that they are responsible for it or that they caused it.
  • convict — If someone is convicted of a crime, they are found guilty of that crime in a law court.
  • sentence — Grammar. a grammatical unit of one or more words that expresses an independent statement, question, request, command, exclamation, etc., and that typically has a subject as well as a predicate, as in John is here. or Is John here? In print or writing, a sentence typically begins with a capital letter and ends with appropriate punctuation; in speech it displays recognizable, communicative intonation patterns and is often marked by preceding and following pauses.
  • hire — to engage the services of (a person or persons) for wages or other payment: to hire a clerk.
  • limit — the final, utmost, or furthest boundary or point as to extent, amount, continuance, procedure, etc.: the limit of his experience; the limit of vision.
  • restrain — to hold back from action; keep in check or under control; repress: to restrain one's temper.
  • detain — When people such as the police detain someone, they keep them in a place under their control.
  • imprison — to confine in or as if in a prison.
  • fasten — to attach firmly or securely in place; fix securely to something else.
  • hurt — to cause bodily injury to; injure: He was badly hurt in the accident.
  • hold — to have or keep in the hand; keep fast; grasp: She held the purse in her right hand. He held the child's hand in his.
  • keep — to hold or retain in one's possession; hold as one's own: If you like it, keep it. Keep the change.
  • maintain — to keep in existence or continuance; preserve; retain: to maintain good relations with neighboring countries.
  • bind — If something binds people together, it makes them feel as if they are all part of the same group or have something in common.
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