释义 |
Definition of outcast in English: outcastnoun ˈaʊtkɑːstˈaʊtˌkæst A person who has been rejected or ostracized by their society or social group. she went from trusted pal to ostracized outcast overnight Example sentencesExamples - She still will be an outcast at school.
- They saw me as a ghost, or some other outcast of society.
- Why did she feel it would be a good idea to create an outreach program for social outcasts?
- Once in prison, inmates are officially designated as social outcasts.
- Do we ban everything that is potentially dangerous and turn the practitioners into social outcasts?
- I felt like I was being made a total outcast.
- The ones that survive become social outcasts because of the nature of their injuries.
- The gypsies, who number almost a million, have been outcasts for centuries.
- We are, in our own small way, outcasts from the tribe, and of course that hurts.
- I was a total social outcast, but usually I didn't mind.
- The men here are lawbreakers and outcasts from society.
- He was always considered an outcast, because of his shyness and nerdy behavior.
- Your character Jamie is a total outcast in school.
- So they were using all the remnants, refuse, and outcasts of our society.
- No longer could gays and lesbians be treated by society and by the law as social outcasts, a marginal and disposable fringe.
- She believes that they are both outcasts from society.
- The student in question says that he's become an outcast at the school.
- Thus he flouted the social hierarchies of his time by eating and associating with outcasts.
- The popular kids will always be the popular kids, and the outcasts remain outcast.
- We think of them as outcasts or even the opposition to social movements.
Synonyms pariah, persona non grata, reject, leper, untouchable foundling, waif, stray exile, refugee, displaced person, DP, asylum seeker, evacuee, expatriate, outsider, outlaw, castaway rare Ishmael
adjective ˈaʊtkɑːstˈaʊtˌkæst (of a person) rejected or ostracized. they can be made to feel outcast and inadequate Example sentencesExamples - This early medieval Sanskrit text recounts the Saivite myth of an outcast king who had been a dog in a previous birth.
- She heard several calling her the murderer but most of them were pointing fingers at some of the outcast boys.
- This caused the Romantic era to see him as an emblem of the outcast artist, and Byron and others wrote poems about him.
- They even openly tackle such issues as outcast gay preachers during the show.
- One of the men was an outcast member of an evil demon tribe in the East.
- Her outcast friends were very similar to the group that sat before her, and she was extremely happy with that.
- It examines what happens when the outcast kid is pushed too far.
- Your mother was an outcast elf princess who was shunned from her kingdom.
- From his initial statements, we see Antony bewailing his outcast state and blaming it on Cleopatra.
- Along with the music came an interest in books, which was a guarantor of outcast status back then and probably still is today.
- Any breakdown in these prescriptions risks serious pollution, bringing danger to those affected and outcast status to the perpetrator.
- But the idea of the outcast protester has a noble lineage in Argentine music and arts.
- She hates her outcast status, but has too much respect for herself to compromise or curry favor.
- Nowadays it's a one-way ticket to unemployment and outcast status.
- Her long and lonely outcast life has led her to be cold and depressed.
- They weren't cool or extremely popular, nor were they unpopular, and didn't go out of their way to befriend the socially inept outcast types.
- Second, Charles deals with and accepts these outcast individuals where they are.
- Within ten minutes of arriving, she is the most socially outcast rider in the stables.
- It was an outcast table for it was far away from all others in the corner.
- Beth was my best friend and stuck by me unlike my other outcast friends who think I'm a bratty popular kid now.
Definition of outcast in US English: outcastnounˈaʊtˌkæstˈoutˌkast A person who has been rejected by society or a social group. Example sentencesExamples - The student in question says that he's become an outcast at the school.
- The gypsies, who number almost a million, have been outcasts for centuries.
- Thus he flouted the social hierarchies of his time by eating and associating with outcasts.
- Once in prison, inmates are officially designated as social outcasts.
- Why did she feel it would be a good idea to create an outreach program for social outcasts?
- The popular kids will always be the popular kids, and the outcasts remain outcast.
- I felt like I was being made a total outcast.
- We are, in our own small way, outcasts from the tribe, and of course that hurts.
- No longer could gays and lesbians be treated by society and by the law as social outcasts, a marginal and disposable fringe.
- Do we ban everything that is potentially dangerous and turn the practitioners into social outcasts?
- She believes that they are both outcasts from society.
- The men here are lawbreakers and outcasts from society.
- We think of them as outcasts or even the opposition to social movements.
- Your character Jamie is a total outcast in school.
- She still will be an outcast at school.
- I was a total social outcast, but usually I didn't mind.
- He was always considered an outcast, because of his shyness and nerdy behavior.
- They saw me as a ghost, or some other outcast of society.
- So they were using all the remnants, refuse, and outcasts of our society.
- The ones that survive become social outcasts because of the nature of their injuries.
Synonyms pariah, persona non grata, reject, leper, untouchable
adjectiveˈaʊtˌkæstˈoutˌkast Rejected or cast out. made to feel outcast and inadequate Example sentencesExamples - But the idea of the outcast protester has a noble lineage in Argentine music and arts.
- From his initial statements, we see Antony bewailing his outcast state and blaming it on Cleopatra.
- Her outcast friends were very similar to the group that sat before her, and she was extremely happy with that.
- Within ten minutes of arriving, she is the most socially outcast rider in the stables.
- They weren't cool or extremely popular, nor were they unpopular, and didn't go out of their way to befriend the socially inept outcast types.
- One of the men was an outcast member of an evil demon tribe in the East.
- Nowadays it's a one-way ticket to unemployment and outcast status.
- This caused the Romantic era to see him as an emblem of the outcast artist, and Byron and others wrote poems about him.
- They even openly tackle such issues as outcast gay preachers during the show.
- It examines what happens when the outcast kid is pushed too far.
- Your mother was an outcast elf princess who was shunned from her kingdom.
- Along with the music came an interest in books, which was a guarantor of outcast status back then and probably still is today.
- Any breakdown in these prescriptions risks serious pollution, bringing danger to those affected and outcast status to the perpetrator.
- She hates her outcast status, but has too much respect for herself to compromise or curry favor.
- This early medieval Sanskrit text recounts the Saivite myth of an outcast king who had been a dog in a previous birth.
- Second, Charles deals with and accepts these outcast individuals where they are.
- Beth was my best friend and stuck by me unlike my other outcast friends who think I'm a bratty popular kid now.
- Her long and lonely outcast life has led her to be cold and depressed.
- She heard several calling her the murderer but most of them were pointing fingers at some of the outcast boys.
- It was an outcast table for it was far away from all others in the corner.
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