There's been so much written about these concepts you'll have a hard time pinning them down. They're often used interchangeably. When you look in most dictionaries you'll probably see several useages listed for both of them.
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AnonymousFrom a linguistic, definitional and etymological perspective, these two words do not have the same meaning.Freedom had been used in English for hundreds of years before the French-derived liberty made its way into English in the late 14th century. The -dom suffix
I assert that in fact, FREEDOM is a fabricated imposter for Liberty.
AnonymousThat's way off!Liberty comes from the Latin word libertas, which means “unbounded, unrestricted or released from constraint.”It came from the Latin word to French. When liberty entered the English language in the 14th century, the vulgar form of Latin that had been spoken in what is today called France was no longer called Latin. The language