释义 |
alienate
al·ien·ate A0199900 (āl′yə-nāt′, ā′lē-ə-)tr.v. al·ien·at·ed, al·ien·at·ing, al·ien·ates 1. To cause to become unfriendly or hostile; estrange: alienate a friend; alienate potential supporters by taking extreme positions.2. To cause to become withdrawn or unresponsive; isolate or dissociate emotionally: The numbing labor tended to alienate workers.3. To cause to be transferred; turn away: "He succeeded ... in alienating the affections of my only ward" (Oscar Wilde).4. Law To transfer (property or a right) to the ownership of another, especially by an act of the owner rather than by inheritance. [Latin aliēnāre, aliēnāt-, from Latin aliēnus, alien; see alien.] al′ien·a′tor n.alienate (ˈeɪljəˌneɪt; ˈeɪlɪə-) vb (tr) 1. to cause (a friend, sympathizer, etc) to become indifferent, unfriendly, or hostile; estrange2. to turn away; divert: to alienate the affections of a person. 3. (Law) law to transfer the ownership of (property, title, etc) to another person ˈalienˌator nal•ien•ate (ˈeɪl yəˌneɪt, ˈeɪ li ə-) v.t. -at•ed, -at•ing. 1. to turn away the affection of; make indifferent or hostile: He has alienated most of his friends. 2. to transfer or divert: to alienate funds from their intended purpose. 3. Law. to convey (title, property, etc.) to another: to alienate lands. [1400–50; late Middle English < Latin aliēnātus, past participle of aliēnāre, derivative of aliēnus alien] al′ien•a`tor, n. syn: See estrange. alienate Past participle: alienated Gerund: alienating
Imperative |
---|
alienate | alienate |
Present |
---|
I alienate | you alienate | he/she/it alienates | we alienate | you alienate | they alienate |
Preterite |
---|
I alienated | you alienated | he/she/it alienated | we alienated | you alienated | they alienated |
Present Continuous |
---|
I am alienating | you are alienating | he/she/it is alienating | we are alienating | you are alienating | they are alienating |
Present Perfect |
---|
I have alienated | you have alienated | he/she/it has alienated | we have alienated | you have alienated | they have alienated |
Past Continuous |
---|
I was alienating | you were alienating | he/she/it was alienating | we were alienating | you were alienating | they were alienating |
Past Perfect |
---|
I had alienated | you had alienated | he/she/it had alienated | we had alienated | you had alienated | they had alienated |
Future |
---|
I will alienate | you will alienate | he/she/it will alienate | we will alienate | you will alienate | they will alienate |
Future Perfect |
---|
I will have alienated | you will have alienated | he/she/it will have alienated | we will have alienated | you will have alienated | they will have alienated |
Future Continuous |
---|
I will be alienating | you will be alienating | he/she/it will be alienating | we will be alienating | you will be alienating | they will be alienating |
Present Perfect Continuous |
---|
I have been alienating | you have been alienating | he/she/it has been alienating | we have been alienating | you have been alienating | they have been alienating |
Future Perfect Continuous |
---|
I will have been alienating | you will have been alienating | he/she/it will have been alienating | we will have been alienating | you will have been alienating | they will have been alienating |
Past Perfect Continuous |
---|
I had been alienating | you had been alienating | he/she/it had been alienating | we had been alienating | you had been alienating | they had been alienating |
Conditional |
---|
I would alienate | you would alienate | he/she/it would alienate | we would alienate | you would alienate | they would alienate |
Past Conditional |
---|
I would have alienated | you would have alienated | he/she/it would have alienated | we would have alienated | you would have alienated | they would have alienated | ThesaurusVerb | 1. | alienate - arouse hostility or indifference in where there had formerly been love, affection, or friendliness; "She alienated her friends when she became fanatically religious"disaffect, estrange, alienalter, change, modify - cause to change; make different; cause a transformation; "The advent of the automobile may have altered the growth pattern of the city"; "The discussion has changed my thinking about the issue"drift apart, drift away - lose personal contact over time; "The two women, who had been roommates in college, drifted apart after they got married"wean - detach the affections of | | 2. | alienate - transfer property or ownership; "The will aliened the property to the heirs"alientransfer - cause to change ownership; "I transferred my stock holdings to my children" | | 3. | alienate - make withdrawn or isolated or emotionally dissociated; "the boring work alienated his employees"impress, strike, affect, move - have an emotional or cognitive impact upon; "This child impressed me as unusually mature"; "This behavior struck me as odd" |
alienateverb antagonize, anger, annoy, offend, irritate, hassle (informal), gall, repel, estrange, piss off (taboo slang), lose the affection of, disaffect The government cannot afford to alienate either group.alienate someone from something estrange, separate, divide, divorce, divert, break off, set against, disunite, part, drive apart, make hostile, disaffect, set at odds, make unfriendly His ex-wife was determined to alienate him from his two boys.alienateverb1. To make distant, hostile, or unsympathetic:disaffect, disunite, estrange.Idiom: set at odds.2. Law. To change the ownership of (property) by means of a legal document:cede, deed, grant, make over, sign over.Law: alien, assign, convey, transfer.Translationsalien (ˈeiliən) adjective foreign. alien customs. 外國的 外国的 noun1. a foreigner. Aliens are not welcome there. 外國人 外侨2. a creature from another planet. aliens from outer space; He claims that he was abducted by aliens. 外星人 外星人ˈalienate (-neit) verb to make someone feel unfriendly to one. He alienated his wife by his cruelty to her. 使疏遠 使疏远ˌalieˈnation noun 疏遠 疏远alienate
alienate (one) from1. To isolate or estrange one from something. Her status as the teacher's pet alienated Lisa from her peers.2. To cause a person or group to reject something. The candidate alienated many potential voters from his party when he insulted blue-collar workers.See also: alienatealienate someone from someone or somethingto cause someone to feel negative about someone or something. The teacher alienated the entire class from the subject of calculus.See also: alienatealienate
alienate (āl′ē-ĕ-nāt″) [L. alienus, someone else's, alien] To isolate, estrange, or dissociate. alienate
AlienateTo voluntarily convey or transfer title to real property by gift, disposition by will or the laws of Descent and Distribution, or by sale. For example, a seller may alienate property by transferring to a buyer a parcel of the seller's land containing a house, in exchange for cash. The seller is said to have alienated her rights in that parcel, such as the right to modify or even demolish the house on the parcel of land, to the buyer. Those rights now belong to the buyer. alienate to transfer the ownership of property or title to another person.ALIENATE, aliene, alien. This is a generic term applicable to the variousmethods of transferring property from one person to another. Lord Coke, says,(1 Inst. 118 b,) alien cometh of the verb alienate, that is, alienum facerevel ex nostro dominio in alienum trawferre sive rem aliquam in dominiumalterius transferre. These methods vary, according to the nature of theproperty to be conveyed and the particular objects the conveyance isdesigned to accomplish. It has been held, that under a prohibition toalienate, long leases are comprehended. 2 Dow's Rep. 210. FinancialSeealienationalienate
Synonyms for alienateverb antagonizeSynonyms- antagonize
- anger
- annoy
- offend
- irritate
- hassle
- gall
- repel
- estrange
- piss off
- lose the affection of
- disaffect
phrase alienate someone from somethingSynonyms- estrange
- separate
- divide
- divorce
- divert
- break off
- set against
- disunite
- part
- drive apart
- make hostile
- disaffect
- set at odds
- make unfriendly
Synonyms for alienateverb to make distant, hostile, or unsympatheticSynonyms- disaffect
- disunite
- estrange
verb to change the ownership of (property) by means of a legal documentSynonyms- cede
- deed
- grant
- make over
- sign over
- alien
- assign
- convey
- transfer
Synonyms for alienateverb arouse hostility or indifference in where there had formerly been love, affection, or friendlinessSynonymsRelated Words- alter
- change
- modify
- drift apart
- drift away
- wean
verb transfer property or ownershipSynonymsRelated Wordsverb make withdrawn or isolated or emotionally dissociatedRelated Words |