(and pa. pple.) Obs. [ad. L. līberāt-us, pa. pple. of līberāre to LIBERATE.] Liberated, free. Const. from.
1597. A. M., trans. Guillemeaus Fr. Chirurg., 46 b/2. That the matter might have the liberater a passage to enter forth at.
1637. Gillespie, Eng.-Pop. Cerem., I. viii. 25. The Christian Church is liberate from the Pedagogicall instruction of the Ceremoniall Law.
1671. True Nonconf., 125. The old dispensation from which we are liberate.
1752. J. Louthian, Form of Process (ed. 2), 63. The Prisoner [shall be] immediately liberate from his Imprisonment.