ALIENATE

Source: 524, 553, 566, 567

A'LIENATE, verb transitive [Latin alieno.]1. To transfer title, property or right to another; as, to alienate lands, or sovereignty.2. To estrange; to withdraw, as the affections; to make indifferent or averse, where love or friendship before subsisted; with from; as, to alienate the heart or affections; to alienate a man from the friends of his youth.3. To apply to a wrong use.They shall not alienate the first fruits of the land.Ezekiel 48:14.A'LIENATE, adjective [Latin alienatus.]Estranged; withdrawn from; stranger to; with from.O alienate from God, O spirit accurst.The whigs were alienate from truth.

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alienate. (fr) alienate, to estrange, or with-drawe the mind, or to make a thing another mans.

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alienate. Alienate, v.t. to transfer, estrange, withdraw

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Al″ien‐ate (āl″yen‐ā̍t), a. [[L. alienatus, p. p. of alienare, fr. alienus. See Alien, and cf. Aliene.]] Estranged; withdrawn in affection; foreign; — with from. O alienate from God. Milton.