Meaning of freeest | Babel Free
Definitions
superlative form of free: most free
form-of, proscribed, superlative
Examples
“My personal ease and independence were less infringed than that of those who are accounted the freeest members of society.”
“1835, Joseph Holt Ingraham, The South-west volume I, Harper & Brothers, page 238, The negroes are more animated, as their winter clothing is distributed, their little crops are harvested, and their wood and other comforts secured for that season ; which, to them, if not the freeest, is certainly the gayest and happiest portion of the year.”
“1852 December, Schwartz Koff, “Conditions of Governmental Development”, in The Yale Literary Magazine volume XVIII, number III (December 1852), A. H. Maltby, page 118, […] that England is, next to our own country, the freeest nation upon the globe.”
“[…]the principle of local self-government and strong political action, engendered by the efforts of the Huguenots to protect their liberties, would most probably have made France one of the freeëst nations of the world, have saved it from all its ruinous Revolutions, and possibly have given a wholly different aspect to the face of southern Europe.”
“That Ideal, as I conceive it, agrees with the Democratic in so far as it implies the greatest possible equalisation of external advantages, and hence freeëst possible scope for individual effort.”
“I feared thou wouldst not long content thee away from thy native land, and it is right that thou shouldst return if inspiration comes to the freeëst under thine own skies;”
“It is known under the name of bimanual massage of the uterus , and is performed by the insertion of one hand into the vagina and its passage in the extended position and with the palmar surface directed forward, into the posterior fornix of the vagina, while the other hand is applied to the fundus externally and crowds the uterus down into the pelvis in order to permit the internal fingers to have the freeëst possible access to its posterior wall (Fig. 82).”
“[…]correctly printed—the freeëst from mistakes.”
“Papinian, Ulpian, Scævola, here, unite / To assure the spirit severe of its prescriptive right / To freeëst choice, as fits intelligence, / Of Deity sired, and heired with conscience, reason, sense / Of citizenship on high, the heavenly state, / All conquering, freeing all; intangible, even, of fate.”
CEFR level
B1
Intermediate
This word is part of the CEFR B1 vocabulary — intermediate level.
This word is part of the CEFR B1 vocabulary — intermediate level.