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Synonyms

alienated

American  
[ey-lee-uh-ney-tid, eyl-yuh-] / ˈeɪ li əˌneɪ tɪd, ˈeɪl jə- /

adjective

  1. indifferent or hostile.

    A year after the floods, the failure of the promised rehabilitation package has fed an already alienated populace's sense of hurt and anger towards the government.

  2. withdrawn or isolated from the objective world.

    Albert Camus's novel The Stranger is the story of an alienated, unfeeling man who kills someone for no reason and dies without remorse.

  3. turned away from its original purpose or course; transferred or diverted.

    The investment firm, which misappropriated millions of dollars committed to it, was required to restore the alienated funds to the plaintiff.

  4. Law. (of property, title, rights, etc.) transferred or conveyed to another.

    Much reservation territory is now owned and controlled by non-Indigenous people, depriving Indigenous nations of billions of dollars in potential income from these alienated lands.


verb

  1. the simple past tense and past participle of alienate.

Other Word Forms

Etymology

Origin of alienated

alienate ( def. ) + -ed 2

Explanation

An alienated person feels estranged or divided from others, like a shy bookworm sitting in a group of enthusiastic sports fans. The word alienated comes from the Latin alienus, which means "of or belonging to another place" — like an alien! A person who feels alienated may not actually be from another place (or planet), but he sure feels that way. You may feel alienated from your friends if they have all decided that punk rock is the greatest thing on earth, but you are still loyal to the classic rock that you all used to love.

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Vocabulary lists containing alienated

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

It’s a growing demographic hitting both genders, driven in part by climbing divorce rates among older Americans and a rising number of adult children becoming alienated from their parents.

From The Wall Street Journal • May 31, 2026

“People are alienated from our current politics not because Americans are cynical, but because people recognize that they deserve better.”

From Los Angeles Times • May 24, 2026

It also alienated voters in the district who had long supported him.

From Slate • May 20, 2026

But the protests also alienated much of the urban middle class and business elite, who accused her of driving investment out of West Bengal.

From BBC • May 5, 2026

Many of these lads felt like targets of a new hunt for oddballs—suspects in a bizarre, systematic search for the strange and the alienated.

From "Geeks: How Two Lost Boys Rode the Internet Out of Idaho" by Jon Katz

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