Citations:libre

free black (noun)

 * 1)  A free (not enslaved) black person in a French- or Spanish-colonized area, especially New Orleans.
 * 2) * 2012, Janet Allured, Michael S. Martin, Louisiana Legacies: Readings in the History of the Pelican State, John Wiley & Sons (ISBN 9781118541883), page 1797:
 * [I]n seeking to attain what whites had—and thus argue for a measure of equity — libres had to come together as a group with their own agenda. [...] Libre women wanted to reform, not revolutionize, a system that condemned them outright for being nonwhites
 * [I]n seeking to attain what whites had—and thus argue for a measure of equity — libres had to come together as a group with their own agenda. [...] Libre women wanted to reform, not revolutionize, a system that condemned them outright for being nonwhites

free (possibly adjective, possibly attributive noun)

 * 1) * 1997, Catherine Clinton, Michele Gillespie, The Devil's Lane: Sex and Race in the Early South, Oxford University Press (ISBN 9780198027218), page 224:
 * The man&#39;s desire to shield his casta offspring and potential heirs also helped secure some protection for his female consort, an advantage not overlooked by libre women.
 * 1) * 2009, Quincy D. Newell, Constructing Lives at Mission San Francisco: Native Californians and Hispanic Colonists, 1776-1821, page 107:
 * The 365 single and libre women baptized at age eighteen or older who married at Mission San Francisco averaged about nine months between their baptisms and their first marriages at the mission.

Adjective: "without charge"

 * 2017 — Gravinez, Sheila C., Milagro nga Nabuhi (17 July), Super Bilib, SuperBalita Cebu
 * Siya naningkamot nga mahimo nga modelo ang ilang barangay sa ubang mga barangay nga usa ka drug free ug nagpatuman og mga programa sama sa paghatag og libre nga tambal ug pagpaospital sa mga kabos, paghatag og lungon sa mga mamatyan ug pagpatukod og balay sa mga uyamot sa ilang yuta nga way abang.