| LIBERATIONIS | The act of freeing, deliverance, release (gen. sing.) (12) |
| EMANCIPATION | The act of freeing or state of being freed (12) |
| COUNTERTENOR | Once torture's deployed to secure information, finally he"ll sing (12) |
| LIBERATION | Deliverance; release |
| ESCAPOLOGY | The study or use of methods of freeing oneself from any sort of constraint or confinement (10) |
| DELIVERANCE | Act of freeing |
| ARBUTUS | Wild strawberry, as described by Propertius: surgat et in solis formosior ____ antris (1.2.11) |
| INITIA | Starting points; dicitis ____ proponi necesse esse apta (Cic. De Fin. 4.46) |
| CONTEXTA | Interwoven; perpetua et inter se ____ sunt (Sen. Ep. Ad Luc. 4.33) |
| SPECIE | With the appearance of: sed fugae ____ discessum (Tac. Ann. 6.44) |
| EXTRICATION | Process of freeing from a constraint or difficulty (11) |
| UNICUS | Distinctive, like the Nile; in aestatem crescit campisque redundat ____ in terris (Lucr. DRN 6.712-713) |
| AMBAGES | A roundabout path, hence a complicated story, eg Venus's account of the founding of Carthage, Aen. 1.342 (7) |
| ISTA | That dreadful one of yours, as in Cicero’s question to Verres: quae est ____ praetura? (In Verrem 2.2.46) |
| LAPSUSLINGUAE | Eg, the queer old dean — it's literally the tongue's fault |
| LAQUEO | Snare, noose (abl. sing.); ____ gulam fregere, an instance of capital punishment (vide Sall. Cat. 55.4) (6) |
| BLUEY | This Australian cattle dog, who lived 29 years and 160 days, has been recognized as the longest living dog as verified by Guinness World Records. |
| CADO | I fall — compare and contrast with I withdraw |
| RUINAS | State of destruction; incendia villarum ac ____, omnia ferro ignique vastata (Livy 7.30) (acc.) |
| IBEAMS | Pointers such as builders use — one trims round back of cottage |