Need another word that means the same as “deliverance”? Find 15 synonyms and 30 related words for “deliverance” in this overview.
The synonyms of “Deliverance” are: delivery, rescue, saving, liberation, release, freeing, discharge, ransom, emancipation, utterance, statement, announcement, pronouncement, declaration, proclamation
According to the Oxford Dictionary of English, “deliverance” as a noun can have the following definitions:
announcement | The action of making an announcement. An announcement is appearing in the Morning Post tomorrow. |
declaration | A formal expression by a meeting; agreed to by a vote. His declaration of innocence. |
delivery | Your characteristic style or manner of expressing yourself orally. Injuries sustained during delivery. |
discharge | A substance that has been discharged. The discharge of pus. |
emancipation | The fact or process of being set free from legal, social, or political restrictions; liberation. The early struggle for emancipation from slavery. |
freeing | The act of liberating someone or something. |
liberation | Freedom from limits on thought or behaviour. She worked for women s liberation. |
proclamation | A formal public statement. The issuing by the monarch of a proclamation dissolving Parliament. |
pronouncement | A formal or authoritative announcement or declaration. Distrust of the pronouncements of politicians was endemic. |
ransom | The holding or freeing of a captive in return for payment of a ransom. The kidnappers demanded a ransom. |
release | A device that when pressed will release part of a mechanism. A new release from the London Symphony Orchestra. |
rescue | Denoting or relating to a domestic animal that has been removed from a situation of abuse or neglect by a welfare organization. The dramatic rescue of nine trapped coal miners. |
saving | The money one has saved, especially through a bank or official scheme. The agents were cheating them out of their life savings. |
statement | (in the UK) an official assessment made by a local education authority concerning a child’s special educational needs. This is correct as a statement of fact. |
utterance | An uninterrupted chain of spoken or written language. He whispered as if to lend his utterances an added confidentiality. |
ambulance | Convey in an ambulance. We called an ambulance. |
atonement | Compensation for a wrong. An annual ceremony of confession and atonement for sin. |
crisis | The turning point of a disease when an important change takes place, indicating either recovery or death. They went bankrupt during the economic crisis. |
danger | A dangerous place. He feared the dangers of traveling by air. |
deliver | Deliver a speech oration or idea. The pitcher delivered the ball. |
depositor | A person who has deposited money in a bank or similar institution. |
economical | (of a person or lifestyle) careful not to waste money or resources. Aspects of social political and economical life. |
financial | The finances or financial situation of an organization or individual. At the end of the year fund managers sell their worst performing stocks and financials have fared badly this year. |
frugal | Simple and plain and costing little. A frugal farmer. |
help | A person or thing that helps. She has taught herself to cook since the defection of the last of the village helps. |
hostage | A person seized or held as security for the fulfilment of a condition. Three hostages were released but only after their families paid an estimated 200 000 to the guerrillas. |
lifeboat | A small boat kept on a ship for use in emergency, typically one of a number on deck or suspended from davits. |
lifeguard | An attendant employed at a beach or pool to protect swimmers from accidents. |
lifesaver | A lifeguard working on a beach. A microwave could be a lifesaver this Christmas. |
parsimony | Extreme unwillingness to spend money or use resources. A great tradition of public design has been shattered by government parsimony. |
passbook | A record of deposits and withdrawals and interest held by depositors at certain banks. |
redemption | The act of purchasing back something previously sold. Serfs began paying redemption dues. |
redemptive | Of or relating to or resulting in redemption- E.K.Brown. The healing power of redemptive love. |
rescue | Denoting the emergency excavation of archaeological sites threatened by imminent building or road development. The dramatic rescue of nine trapped coal miners. |
salvage | Payment made or due to a person who has saved a ship or its cargo. It was the only crumb of comfort he could salvage from the ordeal. |
salvation | Deliverance from sin and its consequences, believed by Christians to be brought about by faith in Christ. They turned to individualism as their salvation. |
save | Save from sins. I ll save you the trouble. |
saving | Characterized by thriftiness. This resulted in a considerable saving in development costs. |
scrimp | Be thrifty or parsimonious; economize. Scratch and scrimp. |
skimp | A fashionably short or revealing garment. She wore a yellow skimp. |
sparing | Avoiding waste. Physicians advised sparing use of the ointment. |
sparingly | To a meager degree or in a meager manner. The sharply flavoured leaves should be used sparingly. |
stinginess | A lack of generosity; a general unwillingness to part with money. |
survivor | A person who survives, especially a person remaining alive after an event in which others have died. The survivors of the fire were taken to a hospital. |
thrifty | Using money and other resources carefully and not wastefully. He had been brought up to be thrifty and careful. |
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