How To Use Alienated In A Sentence

  • But even these alienated loners can benefit from this book: See the section on astral love.
  • The party is struggling to win back voters who have been alienated by recent scandals.
  • Querulousness, arrogance and an erratic streak alienated even his closest supporters, dooming his place in history.
  • Then the '90s hit, corporations further alienated people with touch-tone technology, and we all learned that the little guy on the lower-right corner of our dial pad had an easier to pronounce name than ‘#.’
  • In theory, this could be a smart strategic move but it is likely to "domesticate" Julian Assange; running such an NGO would require too many boring meetings with potential funders many of whom have already been alienated by the organisation and a nine-to-five office routine - the exact opposite of the glamorous nomadic lifestyle that the founder of WikiLeaks has become famous for. The Guardian World News
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  • All these changes to the newspaper have alienated its traditional readers.
  • He appropriated just enough of the rhetoric of each faction to keep them all enthralled and unalienated. The Times Literary Supplement
  • Whatever our expectations are of Cotswold cuteness, we're out of step with the locals, who clearly haven't been alienated by the refurb.
  • For discussions allow passion to subside; and to persuade alienated neighbors, or at least one of them, to listen to the voice of a conciliator, is a step in the direction of peace. Albert Gobat - Nobel Lecture
  • Fundamentalism is a cultural backlash to globalization; the alienated and angry young men of colonized societies and cultures react to the erosion of their identity and security.
  • Historically, a certain segment of the population: generally white, somewhat declassed and alienated, developed some sense of aesthetic exploration or at least an identity as a consumer of the same, and the indie store/Outpost section emerged to market to them. War of All Against All: Realism vs Fabulism? Er, No…
  • He is hardly the only alienated character in the movie.
  • Nick Gevers said it best: "(the novel) tells in sumptuous claustrophobic detail just how alien -- and alienated -- a human society might become, portraying a mighty far-future city state driven by absolute standards of meritocracy turning against itself in hysteria and bloodshed Jack Vance "To Live Forever" & other extravaganzas
  • Very talented children may feel alienated from the others in their class.
  • This parcel of alienated land on which school and mission were sited became a new source of dispute.
  • When we reconnected at a Middlebury Christmas party a couple of years ago, she informed me, being perhaps slightly under the influence of holiday cheer, that her self-confident college persona had been a ruse—that she was insecure, alienated and frankly didn't know how to have a good time. She's Gone to the Dogs
  • In case both parties agree to let the alienator continuously possess the chattel when the real right of a chattel is alienated, the real right shall go into effect upon the effectiveness of the agreement.
  • He was happy, unalienated, pulling a 4.0 and relentlessly straight with a series of Laguna girls. Savages
  • Organisationally, we have not made maximum use of the opportunities presented by democracy, peace and stability to do consistent work among the sector that were alienated from the movement, such as amakhosi, the rural masses and Indian communities of Chatsworth and Phoenix. AFRICAN NATIONAL CONGRESS
  • Finally, corporate HQ had alienated its store managers through infantilizing incentives schemes, and irritated its employees with oppressive ‘loss prevention’ policies.
  • I became alienated from everything that was going on around me - because of the violence and extremity of it.
  • The same year saw the release of "Brainscan," with the mop-headed actor as an alienated suburban gorehound who finds that a new, gruesome interactive video game is a little too realistic. Living in the Past, Fearing the Future
  • They are alienated, in the Marxist sense, from the product of their labours and this cannot be changed without revolutionary upheaval and the overthrow of capitalism.
  • The villages and small towns - which we call the "periphery" - identify with the south and are alienated from the north. Palestine Blogs aggregator
  • The session four years ago alienated many moderate voters with its fire-and-brimstone rhetoric that included attacks on gays and feminists.
  • They were, and still are, the gods of geek rock, and their songs have become anthems for the alienated, awkward, and lonely.
  • It had cost her several longstanding friendships and had alienated co-workers.
  • The sensation of disembodiment, an alienated dissociation common to the early phase of readjustment. Skinned
  • No matter how much you talk about global effects or global capitalism, some people are very alienated and isolated in this world.
  • But all Americans would be much better off if Indians felt unalienated, and proudly and unambivalently Indian and American, just as the Frisians feel proud to be both Frisian and Dutch.
  • Rather, his heroes are angst-ridden anti-heroes, his stories those of alienated men who unexpectedly find themselves with blood of their own, and others, on their hands.
  • Worse, a discouraged, angry, and alienated lower class is directly related to the growing debasement of our popular culture.
  • Successive governments have taken no interest in restoring our alienated lands.
  • The party is struggling to win back voters who have been alienated by recent scandals.
  • Ariyarathne attempts to demonstrate that the missionary education alienated children from their parents and other family members.
  • Of course, it wasn't the first time in my life that I felt alienated, but it was the first time in my life that I couldn't leave the group and the space to find a more copesetic place and people that fit my personality better, so I began to adjust to those around me. Overtaken Diary Entry
  • Within the class, only the ‘alienated’ worker is truly revolutionary.
  • The system as a whole becomes inefficient and dysfunctional and the people are alienated further from it and the leaders.
  • The session four years ago alienated many moderate voters with its fire-and-brimstone rhetoric that included attacks on gays and feminists.
  • You emphasize that, as a man alienated by modern life, Kaczynski is "average," "emblematic" of his time, and "a bellwether" of where things are headed, rather than a bizarre and isolated case. The Disease of the Modern Era
  • Old friends were alienated by her increasingly kooky and embattled militance. Early Right-Wing Whackwits
  • Jim Gibbons was tossed aside Tuesday -- the first incumbent governor in Nevada history to lose a nominating election after a tumultuous first term marred by a bitter divorce, allegations of infidelities and an abrasive style that alienated members of his own party. Las Vegas News - LasVegasNOW.com
  • The attraction of political power is said to have reconciled his alienated parental family.
  • In Menelaus there was no wisedom, to seke and hunte after Helena, or by any meanes to possesse her, she be - yng a harlotte, her loue alienated, her hart possessed with the loue of an other manne: foolishlie he hopeth to possesse loue, A booke called the Foundacion of Rhetorike because all other partes of Rhetorike are grounded thereupon, euery parte sette forthe in an Oracion vpon questions, verie profitable to bee knowen and redde
  • He has not always been popular with his teammates and he has alienated the media by his stand-offishness.
  • But what they take for a witticism might very well be true; most of Ellis's novels tell more or less the same story, about the same alienated ennui, and maybe they really are nothing more than the fictionalised diaries of an unremarkably unhappy man. Bret Easton Ellis: 'So you're a misogynist, a racist – so what? Does it make your art less interesting?'
  • However at this point he has allowed himself to be so circumscribed by the right, and so alienated from the left, that I doubt there is much left that he can do to salvage his presidency. Matthew Yglesias » Ungovernable
  • As a result, the reps can revise follow-on sales accordingly - before customers are alienated.
  • Ferdinand IV also alienated the rural masses by failing to abolish the feudal system and alleviate the tax burden.
  • Lucy, who lives locally, says even as a young girl she felt alienated from her family - unloved and unwanted.
  • He alienated fellow players in an online game with disjointed, hostile posts, including one in which he called the physicist Chicagotribune.com - News
  • If the subinfeudatory lord alienated, it would operate as a forfeiture to the person in immediate reversion. Notes and Queries, Number 231, April 1, 1854 A Medium of Inter-communication for Literary Men, Artists, Antiquaries, Genealogists, etc.
  • In case both parties agree to let the alienator continuously possess the chattel when the real right of a chattel is alienated, the real right shall go into effect upon the effectiveness of the agreement.
  • The publishing magnate is challenging front-runner Dole by attracting largely middle-class suburban voters seemingly alienated from the political process.
  • It is strangely unclassifiable television - a caustically comic, surreptitiously sudsy thriller that has alienated a whole tranche of strait-laced Americans and so delighted many more.
  • While all three novellas center on alienated and deracinated people -- doubters, outcasts, the detritus of biblical stories -- they are slight and unmemorable as fictional characters.
  • Alienated from their surroundings, these youths are chilling totems of a society predicated on division.
  • According to the article, the Republican glitterati is rethinking being pro-life and against gay rights because it alienated moderates who are apparently focused on esoteric issues like jobs, health care and education. No convictions a good spanking can't cure...
  • While it is easy to imagine keeping a bookshop/library where Hemingway, Gide and Maurois constantly pop in for a chat and a biscuit to be some kind of ideal, unalienated labour, Beach's letters show that it was far more tricky than that. The Letters of Sylvia Beach edited by Keri Walsh
  • This is not easy, because as a society we are homogenized, scattered and systematically alienated from the landscapes and communities that nurtured us in our youth.
  • Rather, we were worried that they were becoming too much like oikish, alienated white youth. Home news
  • Catherine Deneuve gives an unmistakably regal performance as Suzanne Bujol, a potiche, or trophy wife, to Robert (Fabrice Luchini) the wealthy, reactionary owner of an umbrella factory in 1977; he patronises his wife and is alienated from his grown-up children (played by Jérémie Renier and Judith Godrèche.) Potiche: A French farce with feeling
  • Modernised, urbanised and alienated as many of us are, photographs remind us of nature's many complexities and subtleties.
  • During the late troubles, the treasures of the state, and even the furniture of the palace, had been alienated or embezzled; the royal banquet was served in pewter or earthenware; and such was the proud poverty of the times, that the absence of gold and jewels was supplied by the paltry artifices of glass and gilt-leather. The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire
  • When we are alienated or frustrated, we will never forget somebody's generous help.
  • The result was an ensemble sound seeming at once subtly alienated and interestingly reconstituted. Times, Sunday Times
  • Kafka's Gregor is quite different from mine a man turned inexplicably into vermin, alienated from all others. An Essay by Marc Estrin, author of Insect Dreams
  • The NCO is part of another America — an America that the media elite is blind to and alienated from. The Media and the Military
  • It is that dissociation that has so troubled us, so alienated us.
  • Added to this is the failure of the party to seriously address these issues, which has alienated many ordinary party members.
  • She thought their methods would ultimately fail, that in fact they actually alienated the community whose support they needed. LOST SUMMER
  • Now we don't know what to do unless we are alienated from speech, from our environment, from our locality.
  • And third, many formerly Labour-leaning "luvvies" have become alienated from the New Labour project, often because of the war in Iraq. Politics news, UK and world political comment and analysis | guardian.co.uk
  • Kabbah's close link with them predictably alienated the army, driving it into an even closer alliance with the rebels.
  • No, any more than Bill O'Reilly and Rupert Murdock caused the jihadist attack on a physician who had violated a terrorist's religious sensibilities -- or, for that matter, any more than jihadist websites that publicize the "blasphemies" perpetrated by the United States cause alienated young men to become suicide bombers against us or our allies. Drew Westen: Gun Violence and the Lessons of Tucson: Will the Chambers Once Again Be Loaded Against the American People?
  • In case both parties agree to let the alienator continuously possess the chattel when the real right of a chattel is alienated, the real right shall go into effect upon the effectiveness of the agreement.
  • We have seen that, if there was one ambitious scheme in his calculation which, though not absolutely generous and heroic, still might win its way to a certain sympathy in the undebased human mind, it was the hope to restore the fallen fortunes of his ancient house, and repossess himself of the long alienated lands that surrounded the dismal wastes of the mouldering hall. My Novel — Volume 09
  • Compared to core conservatives and liberals, however, independents are generally pragmatic and moderate in outlook, and almost by definition are alienated from the hyper-partisan, zero-sum game of politics as played in Washington. Will Marshall: Revolt of the Radical Center, Act III
  • But over time and aided by unidirectional modernism the communal aspects have not only been taken for granted but also alienated.
  • When people suffer a setback, they feel alienated or empty.
  • Rather, his heroes are angst-ridden anti-heroes, his stories those of alienated men who unexpectedly find themselves with blood of their own, and others, on their hands.
  • On the one hand, there is the jural discourse in terms of which Aboriginal citizens of the Northern Territory may enter claims to be recognised as traditional owners of estates in tracts of previously unalienated Crown land.
  • The studied indifference of the federal government increased disaffection among civil rights workers. Black activists especially became increasingly alienated.
  • The publishing magnate is challenging front-runner Dole by attracting largely middle-class suburban voters seemingly alienated from the political process.
  • She felt isolated and alienated in her day-to-day life in Brooklyn.
  • This gap in her memory will continue to leave the event unwitnessed, keeping her fractured self alienated and whirling in a confused temporality, a fractured chronology.
  • Unfortunately, the label pushed it back and made the mistake of making "Number One" the next single and added some questionable elements to the video that alienated some potential buyers close ya shirts, niggas! Archive 2008-04-01
  • It was intellectuals who kept the spotlight on atonalism long after the public got alienated from it.
  • Consequently, unless the plaintiff alienated his ownership, he has been the owner of the case since it came into being.
  • It was also seen by some as an implicit rebuke to right-wing Republicans who had alienated unaligned voters by their apparent intolerance and belligerence.
  • It seems to be killing disciplines like literary criticism, where voguishness and arcane jargon have alienated the ordinary educated reader. The New Age of the Book
  • We then follow his journey towards the training facility, the whole process of "rejuvenation" and all the consequences this corporeal change brings to a couple of thousand people with very alienated relationship towards their bodies; forming of new friendships (the clique of "Old Farts", as they name themselves) and finally John's participation in intergalactic war where the race of men battles myriad of diverse and rapacious alien races for the right of colonization and expansion. John Scalzi - Old Man's War (Book Review)
  • We are, in part, natural beings, but we alone among the animals are in some ways alienated from the natural world in which we live. Fundamentalist creationism and rigidly atheistic evolutionism are both pretty implausible.
  • It is strangely unclassifiable television - a caustically comic, surreptitiously sudsy thriller that has alienated a whole tranche of strait-laced Americans and so delighted many more.
  • we live in an age of rootless alienated people
  • the boring work alienated his employees
  • There is a second major element of the limits of ‘alienated labor’ when it comes to thinking about the disappearance of the welfare state and about unwaged, low-waged or service work.
  • The audience is further alienated from the onstage exchanges by the sound design.
  • However, in their attempts to render their reflexive understanding adequate to their experience, alienated subjects tend to approach contradictions as if they existed in the world itself.
  • The land would then be alienated to the private sector by tender.
  • Being completely alienated from the gang was no option either.
  • Inside he'll always be an alienated monotone teenager.
  • Dear God, I acknowledge I am a sinner and because I am a sinner I know through your word that I am alienated from you.
  • Immigrant kids are more likely to listen to their parents, and they tend not to be alienated ingrates who take their country's prosperity and opportunities for granted.
  • Supporters of these decisions endorse the view that unalienated genetic claims to children can override months or even years of rearing by the adoptive parents, as well as the earlier failure of the father to claim the child. Parenthood and Procreation
  • The sitcom wrestled with notions about a more rewarding, less alienated existence.
  • Yet Marx's original position was not deter - minist: it was avowedly a radical version of Hegelian - ism, in which the self-alienated God of Hegel's Phe - nomenology became self-alienated productive man. DETERMINISM IN HISTORY
  • He alienated many Republicans when he described as heartless anyone who did not agree with his relatively liberal approach to the children of illegal immigrants. Rick Perry forgets which agency he wants to scrap in Republican debate disaster
  • This long delay is not surprising, however, since the movement towards the acquisition of bookland - that is, land alienated from the tribe by use of the land-charter - was not a steady one.
  • The question raised by this display, and by Hodgson's alienated anecdotage on stage, is: can he be for real?
  • Even now the mass of the population is alienated from these institutions and the political elite that inhabits them.
  • American Splendor has, in its sarky and diffident way, some pretty serious things to say about the disaffected and the disenfranchised in American society, alienated from their jobs and their lives.
  • Critics deride him as a publicity hound and his combative character has alienated fellow lawyers in previous class actions.
  • Thirty years ago, if you were the most alienated kid on your block …you would have a hard time finding other kids like yourself.
  • Obama has alienated Ohio; the negative McCain ad (that very few people will actually see) is working; that "differentness" of Obama might start being a bigger issue .... and so on and so forth. New Poll: McCain Leading Among Likely Voters!
  • Most emerge unscathed but some young people become alienated from their families and end up with nowhere to turn.
  • This alienated the democrats, who were ill-disposed to trust an army general anyway.
  • Without others who are willing to gently talk and encourage, the grieving person may feel alienated or as if no one understands or even wants to understand.
  • His centrist, compromising instincts, embodied in the New Democrat covenant, alienated core constituencies while failing to impress opponents.
  • Deborah thinks about everything in material terms, which has alienated her from the other members of her family.
  • British people, who were disgusted with the arrogance of some of the governing class, and discontented with the methods of government, they were gradually alienated by the demagogism of the French Canadian majority, who did not hesitate to profess their desire to make French Canada
  • Chuma's stubborn abstruseness has alienated some critics, but it continues to inform her sense of theater and may be the only thing one can continue to expect from her.
  • The studied indifference of the federal government increased disaffection among civil rights workers. Black activists especially became increasingly alienated.
  • The kids in the small club-style theatre lapped it up, but I was alienated by a wack folklore vibe - when does club dance lose its authentic edge and start to feel more like a museum display?
  • No one would have guessed how alienated I felt, how dislocated, devastated and adrift. ABSOLUTE TRUTHS
  • When they set out to make their fortune, at a very early age, their mother also having in the meantime died, two half-educated but high-spirited and strongly-feeling boys, they had parted with a kind of vow that all their exertions should be addressed to the task of regaining their old possessions and home, and that neither should set foot again upon that beloved alienated land until able in some measure to redeem this pledge. Kirsteen: The Story of a Scotch Family Seventy Years Ago
  • He had lost some right-wing ministers and alienated many backbenchers and supporters outside Parliament.
  • Don't know about bovines in blizzard games, but gender neutral characters tend to be male-centric, and even though I myself use video games as a medium for escapism sometimes, I certainly do not want to be alienated from the experience ALL of the time, and not for reasons that are sexist. Heroine
  • You can feel that special, adolescent magnetism that comes from two alienated teenagers.
  • Unfortunately, President Carter's battles with Congress over legislative vetoes alienated many members.
  • In case both parties agree to let the alienator continuously possess the chattel when the real right of a chattel is alienated, the real right shall go into effect upon the effectiveness of the agreement.
  • He gave generous gifts but did not fully restore the priory's alienated properties.
  • There is another significant limit to any discussion of unwaged or underwaged labor, welfare-to-work or workfare, as ‘alienated labor’ in the Marxian sense.
  • He tells the story of his alienated youth in "Lightning Bug," a bittersweet low-budget feature he directed in 2005. The Virtuoso of Blood and Guts
  • That meant conciliating those alienated in the meantime - Catholics and Royalists.
  • But afterwards, upon some mistrust of him, yet not so great as to make him do him any hurt, his familiarity and friendly kindness to him abated so much of its former force and affectionateness, as to make it evident he was alienated from him. The Lives of the Noble Grecians and Romans
  • What we have are two things going on: One, a society in which our children are alienated and isolated.
  • There was a weeping willow shading two lonely gravestones, alienated from all the others.
  • In some ways this is an asset to the book, since it reinforces the sense that for many young people like "Buzz" Pepper this was an emotionally dead time, but for me the alienated youth theme only seems all the more conventionalized and predictable when it's cast as the foundation of an historical re-creation, a glimpse of a previous era's teenage wasteland. Narrative Strategies
  • These people were alienated from the society they wished to deliver from exploitation.
  • Her alienated, out-of-step Mary Henry is one of horror cinema's great heroines and that image of her stepping coltishly out of the brine, back from the brink of death, is iconic on a Virgin Mary level. 20 Girls 20
  • Others claim that the continuance of the sanctions carries in itself a risk that this country could irreclaimably become a rebel and alienated one.
  • A large body of research on high schools shows that many students are bored, academically unengaged, and deeply alienated in school.
  • The image of the alienated figure is prevalent throughout her work.
  • Her behavior alienated her friends.
  • Too many customers are alienated by our miserly attitude to compensation for mistakes that we made.
  • The property of the enemy was alienated during the war.
  • Hale's eyes stare knowingly at the viewer, a human sacrifice to an alienated and consumerist culture.
  • Alienated from his children and deserted by old friends during this banishment, Sakharov took comfort in the company of a fellow exile, Elena Bonner, an iconoclast and rebel no less difficult than Sakharov himself.
  • I will explore some of the more prominent Buddhist techniques for overcoming our inveterate dualism and the disconnected, alienated, disembodied condition it leads to.
  • Her increasing belligerence alienated her from her old friends.
  • The officials pressured the governments to compensate indigenous owners for permanently alienated land.
  • Gervais alienated the key constituencies: money-obsessed producers, self-obsessed stars, and ratings obsessed television networks. Danny Groner: Ricky Gervais' Defenders Around the World
  • His centrist, compromising instincts, embodied in the New Democrat covenant, alienated core constituencies while failing to impress opponents.
  • Additions to the staff may yet broaden Obama's inner circle or speak for constituencies that feel alienated from the White House. Obama signals continuity, for now, with staff changes
  • Indeed, while its moral rigorism made it attractive to elements of the Counter‐Reformation church, Jansenism's theological and political radicalism alienated both local hierarchies and Catholic monarchs. The Situation of the Classical Roman Rite in Ireland, two years after Summorum Pontificum
  • The bombing alienated world opinion.
  • Kabbah's close link with them predictably alienated the army, driving it into an even closer alliance with the rebels.
  • The expression, "alienated from," takes it for granted that the Gentiles, before they had apostatized from the primitive truth, had been sharers in light and life (compare Eph 4: 18, Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
  • The session four years ago alienated many moderate voters with its fire-and-brimstone rhetoric that included attacks on gays and feminists.
  • Consequently, despite her thoughts to the contrary, she is irrevocably alienated from Zampano.
  • Prepare yourself to feel alienated, and think twice before bringing a date.
  • Where sons of wealthy ranching families tended to be hard-drinking, steak-devouring, woman-chasing "bloods" completely alienated from things of the intellect and spirit, Francisco didn't drink, abstained from meat and believed in arcane mysticism. Glorious innocent: the tragedy and triumph of Francisco Madero (1873–1913)
  • He identifies a group of voters he calls restless and anxious moderates who are disenchanted and even alienated by the two parties. Archive 2008-02-01
  • Both of the major alliances have mounted expensive election campaigns in a desperate attempt to woo alienated voters.
  • The Prime Minister's policy alienated many of her followers.
  • Although the grandparents are understood to be supportive, many of the couple's friends believe that Witterick and Stocker are going to leave their children alienated.
  • Both characters feel alienated by their environment, which leads them to plough a gentle furrow of despair.
  • But she was undeniably alienated in our boxy house, and I could often catch her sad face fixed on a slant of autumn light or a gray squirrel, precarious on a wire.
  • Though alienists might be alienated by the common use of one of their terms to mean “split personality,” the fact is that schizo is Greek for “split.” No Uncertain Terms
  • Facebook's challenge will be to keep these ads as unobtrusive as possible so that users are not alienated or driven to unlike brands.
  • The craftsmen whom Willis describes are involved with their work even though they are alienated from the given structure of the enterprise.
  • The act of taking care of our homes brings comfort and consolation both in the enjoyment of the fruits of our labor and in the increasingly rare freedom to engage in worthwhile, unalienated, honorable work. HOME COMFORTS
  • An alienated and fearful public is the flip side of an isolated and purposeless elite.
  • She becomes alienated from her own desirous strivings. Eating Problems: A Feminist Psychoanalytic Treatment Model
  • Civil discourse and outreach work in ensure these communities do no feel alienated and disenfranchised. Obama hosts Muslim-focused entrepreneurship summit
  • The government has already alienated a large section of the population through existing anti-terror legislation.
  • In case both parties agree to let the alienator continuously possess the chattel when the real right of a chattel is alienated, the real right shall go into effect upon the effectiveness of the agreement.
  • When another person's slave is instituted heir, if he continues in the same condition he must have the order of his master to accept; if alienated by him in the testator's lifetime, or after the testator's death but before acceptance, he must have the order of the alienee to accept; finally, if manumitted in the testator's lifetime, or after the testator's death but before acceptance, he may accept or not at his own discretion. The Institutes of Justinian
  • The Prime Minister's policy alienated many of her followers.
  • Gina had become increasingly alienated from her family.
  • The woman, like her alienated and encaged heart, is restricted.
  • Once the state has alienated any parcel of land, it can never re-establish its original claim.
  • It had cost her several longstanding friendships and had alienated co-workers.
  • The basic claim here is that public schools transform atomized individuals, or alienated minorities/immigrants, into civic-minded American citizens.
  • She complied with his last wish, but in turn alienated her future husband.
  • Jackson's comments alienated many baseball fans.
  • Broad masses of the population are alienated from both parties and view their nominees with deep-seated distrust.
  • 'She received me haughtily: she meted out a wide space between us, and kept me aloof by the reserved gesture, the rare and alienated glance, the word calmly civil.' Shirley, by Charlotte Bronte
  • Indeed, a healing touch is required to retrieve the alienated Kashmiris.
  • The deed of transfer in terms of which the DME alienated the mineral rights defined these as certain 20 unnumbered base mineral claims.
  • My recommendation here would be the novels of someone like Cecelia Holland, who immerses the reader in historical periods so convincingly detailed and yet alienated that they might as well be fantasy worlds -- we have to learn our way around in them from narrative clues, not from infodump exposition or prior knowledge. MIND MELD: Non-Genre Books for Genre Readers
  • So you can imagine what he would do if he were in charge of all our diplomatic efforts, given that his motto seems to be "leave no nation unalienated. Dennis Jett: Let's Get Rid of the State Department
  • Doubtless, she'd be pretty disillusioned if she could she Dellaqua or his strangely alienated and maladjusted crew face-to-face. THE SAVAGE GIRL
  • Note, Sin alienates God's mind from the sinner, and justly, for it is the alienation of the sinner's mind from God; but woe, and a thousand woes, to those from whom God's mind is alienated; for whom he turns from he will turn against. Commentary on the Whole Bible Volume IV (Isaiah to Malachi)
  • A satire on 1960s upper-class suburban America, The Graduate is the story of an alienated college graduate having the mother of all identity crises.
  • The new networks and alliances articulate forms of consciousness that go beyond single issue campaigns and narrow trade union economism on the one hand and reified and alienated forms of social democratic universalism on the other.
  • They are always given the most alienated student and tasked with the impossible job of keeping them from being excluded.
  • She alienated her friends when she became fanatically religious
  • Alienated subjects cannot directly perceive how they participate in a wider process of structuration of meaning.

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