alienation
The act of alienating.
Noun
- The act of alienating.
- The alienation of that viewing demographic is a poor business decision.
- That the mode of alienating their lands, the main source of discontent and war, should be so defined and regulated as to obviate imposition and as far as may be practicable controversy concerning the reality and extent...
- Wearing an Audie Murphy black jacket, playing a Chuck Berry guitar, and performing his electrified alienation with passionate indifference, Dylan assassinated the audience. - 1965 August, Mississippi Phil Ochs, “The...
- The state of being alienated.
- His alienation from his family means he has nowhere to go at Christmas.
- I refer to the state of our divisions and alienations of spirit on account of religion. - 1874, Edward Bannerman Ramsay, Reminiscences of Scottish Life and Character:
- As Hegel showed, time is the necessary alienation, the terrain where the subject realizes himself by losing himself, becomes other in order to become truly himself. In total contrast, the current form of alienation is...
Synonyms: estrangement
- Emotional isolation or dissociation, as from being separated from social connections or estranged from one's family or community; a feeling of being an outsider.
- I didn't care about anything back then, not holidays or family or my career, I felt utter alienation from everything around me.
- When parents get divorced, their child sometimes experiences parental alienation, in which they are estranged from the noncustodial parent.
- But these domestic alienations are not confined to those who once moved in the higher orders of society--the monthly registers announce almost as many divorces as marriages, and the facility of separation has rendered...
- Verfremdungseffekt.
- The transfer of property to another person.
- The most usual and universal method of acquiring a title to real estates is that of alienation, conveyance, or purchase in its limited sense: under which may be comprized any method wherein estates are voluntarily...
- The estrangement of people from aspects of their human nature as a consequence of the division of labour and living in a society of stratified social classes (e.g., under capitalism or feudalism).
Origin
From Middle English alienacioun, borrowed from Old French alienacion, itself borrowed from Latin aliēnātiōn(em).
Forms
Derived
alienation of affection alienation of affections coefficient of alienation nonalienation parental alienation parental alienation syndrome realienation social alienation