English edit

Verb edit

set loose (third-person singular simple present sets loose, present participle setting loose, simple past and past participle set loose)

  1. (transitive) To set free, let go, release, liberate, unleash.
    • 2012 April 4, Sam Anderson, “Just One More Game ...”, in The New York Times Magazine[1]:
      The new product was the Game Boy — a hand-held, battery-powered plastic slab that promised to set gamers loose, after all those decades of sweaty bondage, from the tyranny of rec rooms and pizza parlors and arcades.
    • 2021 December 29, Stephen Roberts, “Stories and facts behind railway plaques: Chester (1848)”, in RAIL, number 947, page 58:
      He laid the foundation stone on August 1 1847, and then set around 2,000 workmen loose on the undertaking. The station opened exactly one year later on August 1 1848.

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