1. alienated - Adjective
2. alienated - Verb
4. alienated - Adjective Satellite
of Alienate
Source: Webster's dictionaryIf you feel alienated from people around you, it's because no one tries to understand you. Robert Smith (musician)
In every work of genius we recognize our own rejected thoughts they come back to us with a certain alienated majesty. Ralph Waldo Emerson
Optimism is an alienated form of faith, pessimism an alienated form of despair. Erich Fromm
The conscious process is reflected in the imagination; the unconscious process is expressed as karma, the generation of actions divorced from thinking and alienated from feeling. William Irwin Thompson
Thousands of alienated young Muslims, most of them born and bred here but who regard themselves as an army within, are waiting for an opportunity to help to destroy the society that sustains them. Melanie Phillips
He alienated his friends in the sciences by thanking them extravagantly for scientific advances he had read about in the recent newspapers and magazines, by assuring them, with a perfectly straight face, that life was getting better and better, thanks to scientific thinking. Kurt Vonnegut