See also: liberty

English

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Etymology

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From liberty.

Proper noun

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Liberty (countable and uncountable, plural Libertys)

  1. A surname.
    1. A surname from French.
    2. A freed slave surname originating as an occupation.
  2. A unisex given name.
    1. A female given name from English.
      • 1985, Anne Tyler, The Accidental Tourist, →ISBN, page 171:
        Then last came Liberty. What a name, Mason always thought. It was an invention of her mother's―a flighty woman who had run away from Porter with a hippie stereo salesman eight and a half years ago and discovered immediately afterward that she was two months pregnant.
    2. A male given name from English.
  3. A number of places in the United States, including:
    1. A town, the county seat of Union County, Indiana.
    2. A minor city in Montgomery County, Kansas
    3. A city, the county seat of Casey County, Kentucky.
    4. A town, the county seat of Amite County, Mississippi.
    5. A city, the county seat of Clay County, Missouri.
    6. A city, the county seat of Liberty County, Texas.
    7. A town in Grant County, Wisconsin.
    8. A town in Manitowoc County, Wisconsin.
    9. A town in Outagamie County, Wisconsin.
    10. A town and unincorporated community therein, in Vernon County, Wisconsin.
    11. A number of townships in the United States, listed under Liberty Township.

Derived terms

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Noun

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Liberty (uncountable)

  1. Used attributively to designate various items (especially textiles) sold by (or characteristic of) the Liberty department store in Regent Street, London. [from 19th c.]
    • 1894, William John Locke, At the Gate of Samaria:
      It had long been dismantled of the Liberty curtains, Persian rugs, and cheap Japaneseries.
    • 1915, W. Somerset Maugham, chapter 40, in Of Human Bondage:
      The piano was draped in Liberty silk and so was the chimney-piece.

Anagrams

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