16. Not arbitrary or despotic; assuring liberty; defending individual rights against encroachment by any
person or class; instituted by a free people; said of a government, institutions, etc.
17. (O. Eng. Law) Certain or honorable; the opposite of base; as, free service; free socage. Burrill.
18. (Law) Privileged or individual; the opposite of common; as, a free fishery; a free warren. Burrill.
19. Not united or combined with anything else; separated; dissevered; unattached; at liberty to escape; as,
free carbonic acid gas; free cells.
Free agency, the capacity or power of choosing or acting freely, or without necessity or constraint upon
the will. Free bench (Eng. Law), a widow's right in the copyhold lands of her husband, corresponding
to dower in freeholds. Free board (Naut.), a vessel's side between water line and gunwale.
Free bond (Chem.), an unsaturated or unemployed unit, or bond, of affinity or valence, of an atom
or radical. Free-borough men (O.Eng. Law). See Friborg. Free chapel (Eccles.), a chapel
not subject to the jurisdiction of the ordinary, having been founded by the king or by a subject specially
authorized. [Eng.] Bouvier. Free charge (Elec.), a charge of electricity in the free or statical condition; free
electricity. Free church. (a) A church whose sittings are for all and without charge. (b) An ecclesiastical
body that left the Church of Scotland, in 1843, to be free from control by the government in spiritual
matters. Free city, or Free town, a city or town independent in its government and franchises, as
formerly those of the Hanseatic league. Free cost, freedom from charges or expenses. South.
Free and easy, unconventional; unrestrained; regardless of formalities. [Colloq.] "Sal and her free and
easy ways." W. Black. Free goods, goods admitted into a country free of duty. Free labor, the
labor of freemen, as distinguished from that of slaves. Free port. (Com.) (a) A port where goods
may be received and shipped free of custom duty. (b) A port where goods of all kinds are received
from ships of all nations at equal rates of duty. Free public house, in England, a tavern not belonging
to a brewer, so that the landlord is free to brew his own beer or purchase where he chooses. Simmonds.
Free school. (a) A school to which pupils are admitted without discrimination and on an equal
footing. (b) A school supported by general taxation, by endowmants, etc., where pupils pay nothing for
tuition; a public school. Free services (O.Eng. Law), such feudal services as were not unbecoming
the character of a soldier or a freemen to perform; as, to serve under his lord in war, to pay a sum of
money, etc. Burrill. Free ships, ships of neutral nations, which in time of war are free from capture
even though carrying enemy's goods. Free socage (O.Eng. Law), a feudal tenure held by certain
services which, though honorable, were not military. Abbott. Free States, those of the United
States before the Civil War, in which slavery had ceased to exist, or had never existed. Free stuff
(Carp.), timber free from knots; clear stuff. Free thought, that which is thought independently of
the authority of others. Free trade, commerce unrestricted by duties or tariff regulations. Free
trader, one who believes in free trade. To make free with, to take liberties with; to help one's self
to. [Colloq.] To sail free (Naut.), to sail with the yards not braced in as sharp as when sailing
closehauled, or close to the wind.
Free (Free) adv.
1. Freely; willingly. [Obs.]
I as free forgive you As I would be forgiven. Shak. 2. Without charge; as, children admitted free.
Free (Free), v. t. [imp. & p. p. Freed ; p. pr. & vb. n. Freeing.] [OE. freen, freoien, AS. freógan.
See Free, a.]
|
|
By PanEris
using Melati.
|
|
|
|
Copyright: All texts on Bibliomania are © Bibliomania.com Ltd,
and may not be reproduced in any form without our written permission.
See our FAQ for more details.
|
|