freeman

Etymology
, paralleled by similar constructions in other Germanic languages. .

Noun

 * 1) A free person, particularly:
 * 2)  A person who is not a serf or slave.
 * 3)  A burgher with full freedom of a city, as opposed to nobles, outsiders, bondsmen, and others.
 * 4) An honorary freeman: a person who has received an honorary freedom of a city.
 * 5)  A person who is a citizen of a free country, as opposed to a subject of a tyranny or totalitarian dictatorship.
 * 6) * 1836,, “Poetry: A Metrical Essay”, republished in The Poems of Oliver Wendell Holmes, Boston, Mass.: , 1862, 5091562 , pages 7–8:
 * There breathes no being but has some pretence / To that fine instinct called poetic sense; / The freeman, casting with unpurchased hand / The vote that shakes the turrets of the land.
 * 1)  A person who immigrated to Australia freely, as opposed to those transported as convicts, or such a transported convict who has regained his freedom.
 * 2)  An independent fur trapper.

Translations

 * German:
 * Russian:


 * Belarusian: во́льны чалаве́к
 * Chinese:
 * Mandarin:
 * Finnish: vapaa mies
 * Hebrew:
 * Japanese: 自由民, 自由人
 * Korean: ,
 * Russian: свобо́дный челове́к
 * Ukrainian: ві́льна люди́на