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 alienation [,eiljә'neiʃәn]   添加此单词到默认生词本
n. 疏远, 离间, 转让

[医] 精神错乱

[经] 转移, 让渡, 转让


  1. Mental illness can create a sense of alienation from the real world.
    精神病能产生一种与现实世界脱离的感觉。
  2. French social scientist and a founder of sociology who is known for his study of social values and alienation. His important works include The Rules of Sociological Method(1895).
    涂尔干,埃米尔1858-1917法国社会科学家,是社会学的创始人之一,以其对社会价值与异化的研究著称,他的重要著作包括社会方式的规则(1895年)
  3. The increasingly dull nature of many industrial jobs has led to the alienation of many workers.
    许多工业工作越来越单调刻板,导致很多工人离心离德的倾向。


alienation
[ noun ]
  1. the feeling of being alienated from other people

  2. <noun.feeling>
  3. separation resulting from hostility

  4. <noun.state>
  5. (law) the voluntary and absolute transfer of title and possession of real property from one person to another

  6. <noun.act>
    the power of alienation is an essential ingredient of ownership
  7. the action of alienating; the action of causing to become unfriendly

  8. <noun.act>
    his behavior alienated the other students


Alienation \Al`ien*a"tion\, n. [F. ali['e]nation, L. alienatio,
fr. alienare, fr. alienare. See {Alienate}.]
1. The act of alienating, or the state of being alienated.

2. (Law) A transfer of title, or a legal conveyance of
property to another.

3. A withdrawing or estrangement, as of the affections.

The alienation of his heart from the king. --Bacon.

4. Mental alienation; derangement of the mental faculties;
insanity; as, alienation of mind.

Syn: Insanity; lunacy; madness; derangement; aberration;
mania; delirium; frenzy; dementia; monomania. See
{Insanity}.

  1. For elderly shut-ins, the settlement operates a visiting service, fostering the sort of neighborly concern that urban crime and alienation can kill.
  2. It is a style that suits both the progressive traditions of Wisconsin politics and the modern alienation of workers worried about economic and social threats to their families.
  3. It is directly related to the alienation that afflicts those who have rebelled against traditional behavior, creating or at least choosing counterculture.
  4. Mr. Wang, who lost his post as deputy editor of the newspaper People's Daily during an earlier crackdown in 1983, has been criticized for controversial writings about the alienation of individuals in socialist society.
  5. In 1988, Wang and other intellectuals founded a journal called "The New Enlightenment" that published daring, probing essays on subjects such as alienation in a socialist society.
  6. Massachusetts voters selected the outspoken John Silber as the Democratic nominee for governor, in an expression of voter alienation.
  7. Yet at times a person, "shuddering at the alienation between the I and the world, comes to reflect that something is to be done," Buber said.
  8. In a letter dated 1904, he called this feeling "entfremdungsgefuhl," a sense of alienation.
  9. It is a reasoned approach, but one that does little to address the alienation here.
  10. Public opinion analysts say Fujimori's strong second-place finish in Sunday's election reflected Peruvians' alienation from the traditional political parties and their desire for "miraculous, painless" solutions to the country's ills.
  11. Only with a needless sub-plot involving tomboy Thora Birch and her wayward father does the film go over the top. A very different form of sentimentality is at work in Autobus, a witty and anarchic look at youthful alienation, French style.
  12. This alienation is apparent from the growing number of emigrants among kibbutzniks, members of the communal farms that were the core of early Zionism.
  13. Departure for you follows on departure, alienation upon alienation.
  14. Departure for you follows on departure, alienation upon alienation.
  15. She and Father Joe maintain that there is less alienation and a more village-like atmosphere in Klong Toey's ramshackle squalor than in the massive concrete tenements to which government officials would like the slum dwellers relocated.
  16. Delegate Clinton Miller of the Virginia state assembly, once rated 'A+' by the NRA, now calls the organisation's top members 'hateful, spiteful, arrogant'. This alienation is apparent among gun-owners at large.
  17. The contribution of Tory policy to that atomisation, to the widespread alienation of individuals from their communities, was not touched upon.
  18. At her table, Ms. Davis confers with friends who urge her to use an old standby, a poem of alienation she worries might not sit well with this reporter, who has volunteered to be a judge for the match.
  19. Rochant said he, too, had to fight the odds, and to circumvent the usual way of making a film in France to create "Tough Life," the story of a young Parisian's alienation from life and love.
  20. But with its new campaign, Mazda risks snickers from its competitors and, worse, possible alienation of some potential customers.
  21. His critics said the museum lacked direction under him and cited what they saw as trendy exhibitions, his failure to hire a strong chief curator and his alienation of some donors.
  22. The Times said Soviet documents describe a "sanitary alienation zone" in contaminated areas in which people are forbidden to live or travel.
  23. Mr Nigel Dodds, a Belfast city councillor for the Democratic Unionist Party, said: 'We have been warning for some time that there is a growing sense of alienation amongst the loyalist community.
  24. "I talked a lot about relationships and obsessions of mine which had to do with death, alienation and ambivalence," he recalls matter of factly.
  25. "A long period of mutual alienation is now behind us," Gorbachev said later in a speech.
  26. Poverty and alienation in Overtown also are factors, some black leaders say.
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