词汇 | example_english_alienate |
释义 | Examples of alienateThese examples are from corpora and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors. Commonly, they felt alienated from non-combatant society, frustrated at personal failure, and resentful of inadequate government policies and pettyminded officials. The book has a major disadvantage too, because it alienates the less able students. At the same time, diplomats are odd people, plucked from their home cultures, yet representing them in alien and perhaps alienating climes. The features on the surface of the model are distorted and alienated as the material repeats itself. All this is good news to the urban historian alienated by the abstractions of architectural history. Labor could be creative or alienated; labor power could be a capacity or a commodity. The counter-insurgent responds with even greater force that does not spare the civilian population, thereby alienating it. Communication is so difficult that centre and periphery become alienated. As a consequence, local communities have to a large extent been alienated from the wildlife. Students who could not afford to pay the costly private fees felt alienated from their more well-to-do classmates. Thirdly, as in wakeful perception, images perceived in dreams are alienated from the dreamer who finds himself interacting with apparently external objects and events. Yancey's (1995) study also attempts to go beyond the confines of school to identify young people who might be alienated from that setting. If the industry fails to address their use of older negative stereotypes, they risk alienating the rapidly growing older market and dissuading younger consumers. Again, the primary means of sonically evoking this alienating experience is through synthesizers and the heavy use of electronic recording techniques. Their revelry and riotous behaviour alienated them from the city inhabitants : they were seen as a good-for-nothing bunch, best avoided. In other words, if one is in despair and feeling alienated, one must do the work of forgiveness to attain connection and spiritual well-being. Most of these ex-young combatants remain traumatised, alienated from family and society, and are still attracted to the culture of violence. Alternatively, the cross-rhythms may signal a conspicuously more arty treatment of material, but ultimately with the same effect of alienating us from the opening tune. In the attempt to destroy the mosquito's breeding ground, the authorities rarely consulted local people, thus alienating potential patients. The factory therefore represents the body instead of alienating it. Money, for instance, makes value anonymous, freeing or alienating it from any individual labor or temporal reference. Is it possible to work in partnership so that the narrator is not alienated from their own story by the analytical skills of the researcher. Given the right urgency and planning, the experience need not be alienating, and can be very pleasurable for the teacher as well as the pupils. Elites, because of their belief in their own expertise and right to rule, were indifferent to popular aspirations in ways that alienated many citizens. Secondly, it is not apparent that older adults are not making use of computers because they are alienated from new technologies. As a consequence, local communities have been alienated to a large extent from the wildlife. Political theorists become alienated from politics, and theory degenerates into a series of 'abstract self-referencing issues' and 'a chase for new philosophical authorities' (p. xiii). Instead of getting him integrated with the enterprise, he is alienated, a situation which increases employee tendency toward spontaneous and unceremonious abandonment of the organisation. Patients dislike drugs which they feel are controlling their mood, and they are also alienated by perceived connotations of chronic illnesses when taking long-term treatments. Rural processes were thus bureaucratised and producers occasionally alienated. The spiritual work is forgiveness through remembering, reassessing, and reuniting with those from whom one feels alienated. The abstractions of the cactus sounds by the end of the work, after all, are quite inviting and nurturing, rather than cold and alienating. Furthermore, thuggee was never practised close to the homes of the thugs and accordingly the inhabitants of their villages were not alienated. The assumption is that plurality electoral systems distort the translation of votes into seats, discouraging and alienating small party supporters and other political minorities. By contrast, persuasive and argumentative discussions with acquaintances run the risk of alienating people and disrupting social relations that must be maintained (such as co-workers). As pointed out earlier, recourse to domestic state violence alienates society and requires a regime to find new ways of generating consensus. In the meantime the crown had alienated its most vital servants. A manifestly partisan author alienates readers or audience members not of like mind. Additionally, political leaders had an interest in persuading citizens to adopt their views, and a number of leaders felt excluded and alienated. By contrast, violence often alienates support within the grievance group. Their argument was straightforward : indigenous land could not be alienated from the community. There was in this a late-modern valuing of open and flexible selfhood, a prizing of responsiveness to change that alienated many conservatives. Nevertheless, most human-to-nonhuman relationships in industrial societies are more unequal and alienated than most human-to-human relationships. My friends might feel psychologically alienated from me if they fail to understand the nature and depth of my feelings, beliefs, motivations or reasons. The need for interactive collective spaces responding to isolated and alienated youth is critical to the health and well-being of society. Another problem for older migrants is that their children grow alienated from them. Through purchase these parties alienated property so it could not be returned to its legitimate heirs. As noted, the most regional and specialized economic activities are the subjects, but in all the murals work is stripped of its alienating character. Here, the concern is not whether one will be oppressed or treated unfairly, but whether one will be deserted, alienated, isolated, or abandoned. The accentuation of procedure opened up new litigation opportunities for the wealthier classes while disadvantaging and alienating the lower strata of society. Alternatively, how could the workers be led towards an authentic class culture without being alienated through denigration of their natural predilections? Instead of connecting with others, an individual may deem him/herself 'special ' and be alienated from others and from life. Simple-minded evolutionary storytelling alienates many more human scientists than it draws into the evolutionary fold. To put the same point another way, broadsheets are read by the politically mobilized and tabloids by some who are alienated or suffering from malaise. Others, especially those living further away in more vulnerable conditions, would become more frightened of alienating the titular nation. They felt alienated because they couldn't read very well, and we had to work without scripts. Productions that abandoned traditional staging tactics alienated some loyal fans, but also attracted a totally new and younger crowd. I felt alienated, marginalized, conscious of not working, of taking my time, of doing something different in the city. A genetic account, whereby "alienating crises and dislocations" (p. 6) produce fundamentalists, is a characteristic. In addition, we will illustrate how high-level concepts can be communicated to a multidisciplinary audience without alienating participants. Contemporary rebels, who deliberately use terror as an instrument of war, are aware that their atrocities have alienated them from society. The leaders could not define party policy because they could not exercise executive powers without alienating their comrades. Their enthusiasm might be catching, but also alienating. The self alone is either alienated - that is, alienated in its selfness - or it actively engages the world and thereby becomes actualized. If one were born into slavery would that mean one was not alienated from the condition (the context) of slavery in which one found oneself? A moral theory that nowhere incorporated an 'internal connection' with actual human concerns or motives would be hopelessly alienated. Because it is progress that increases our power over nature but at the same time disturbs and degrades our environment and alienates us from the living landscape. One may ask what qualities artefacts possess that are inalienable in this way compared with those which are regularly alienated, as well as how their life-history and 'death' differs. How did they react mentally to the context they operated in, and to the fact that they became more and more alienated in their homeland as the war progressed? His communication with the brother was alienated from the very start, and he was prepared to suspect a full range of motivation from him, including foul play. Multiple sociological theories of the alienating effects of violence exposure have been put forth and merit consideration as complimentary conceptualizations to psychological theories of intersystemic processes. By depicting women as close to their own emotions and to other women while describing men as distant and alienated from their feelings, her economy grades women higher than men. Political and religious tensions split many urban elites, leading civic historians all too often to choose anodyne blandness to avoid alienating any section of their already limited audience. Are we seized, possessed, alienated? Rather than slavishly basing management on neo-liberal capitalist institutions and increasingly alienating industrial practices, archaeology is in a strong position to develop innovative and flexible ways of working. To repay these loans, tax revenues were alienated and venal offices were multiplied, not least in the military administration itself where they endlessly complicated the chain of command. Instead of sharing the securities of community and well-known traditions, many people gradually have felt disaffected and alienated as they perceive themselves being treated like goods in a global marketplace. An additional dimension of social exclusion in cities may be the extent to which the environment is perceived as intrinsically alienating and discordant with older people's biographies and values. In his view, citizens are not apathetic; rather, they are alienated from a political system which does not allow them a 'real', that is effective, voice. The utterly alienated becomes the utterly familiar. Hundreds of visitors pass through these spaces daily, people of all ages and backgrounds, most of whom are amused, entertained, challenged or perhaps alienated by these works. In this situation, it was argued, writers became alienated from society. The description is both compassionate and alienated by hysteria. In this way they sought to complement rather than replace what local pastoral activity there was and to avoid alienating other members of the clergy. Moreover, by turning the most prosperous commoners into semi-bureaucrats exempt from taxation, it alienated potential urban leaders from the mass of townsmen. Even if we live in the countryside, we are likely to be alienated from the land and so must create the link afresh. Unfinished sentences in speech are not an indication that the speaker is uncertain, incompetent or alienated. In addition, the typical customs of inheritance in these districts were partible and holdings were often easily alienated or leased out. In addition, the central government reneged on its promise to return the temporarily alienated land after the war. In this view, soldiers returned from war with reasonable demands and expectations, and became alienated by governmental refusal to meet these needs. Both were afraid not only of alienating allies, but also of vagrancy and chaos within their domains. The total experience is not alienating or frightening, as it may be in a hall of mirrors. Each novel presents a main character in a situation in which he or she is in some way alienated. The feeling of estrangement that permeates science fiction is bound to the scientific worldview, and the alienating discovery of the new universe. Many of the non-traditional candidates will also have fewer concerns about alienating future campaign contributors. Exposure to poorly performing governments alienates citizens from the regime. These examples are from corpora and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors. |
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