NOUN
- a person belonging to no caste
ADJECTIVE
-
not belonging to or having been expelled from a caste and thus having no place or status in society
the foreigner was a casteless person
How To Use outcaste In A Sentence
- Even if you belong to the same race, class or creed, you can be an outcaste.
- Ralph realises he has been outcasted, but does not regret his decision not to follow the others, and he now understands why he has been rejected.
- Big groups of harijans, or outcastes, from India were drumming and singing while African road-workers in blue overalls downed tools and African women downed bags to dance to the music from another continent.
- Obviously outcasted wherever she went, she didn't seem to care about it.
- But the untouchables rejected this, they still called themselves, Dalit, a term meaning 'outcaste', 'crushed', 'broken to pieces'. Yahoo! News: Business - Opinion
- As you pointed out, the internet makes a great help community, especially for those outcasted by normal society, or in some cases, even their own families.
- That had been over a year ago, before Tess and I became total recluses and outcasted ourselves until this night.
- He continues, ‘The only place where we're outcasted from is the Northside of Chicago.’
- Those who had children as a result of the rapes are outcastes.
- Found guilty of treason, the Fire Master was stripped of his rank and was made an outcaste from the society of Valis.