স্বভাববহিভুত করা, পর করিয়া দেত্তয়া, পরক করিয়া দেত্তয়া, পরস্ব করিয়া দেত্তয়া, হস্তান্তর করিয়া দেত্তয়া, বিরোধী করিয়া দেত্তয়া
(1) Arouse hostility or indifference in where there had formerly been love, affection, or friendliness.
(2) Transfer property or ownership.
(3) Make withdrawn or isolated or emotionally dissociated.
(4) Arouse hostility or indifference in where there had formerly been love.
(5) affection.
(6) or friendliness.
(7) Cause unfriendliness.
(8) Hostility.
(1) After all, would it make sense - basic commercial sense - for a channel to alienate its main audience by taking a hostile attitude at a time of national crisis?
(2) It's here where Oldham's audience is forced to decide whether or not this whole project is just an elaborate joke to frustrate and alienate his fans.
(3) An urban environment which would alienate its inhabitants
(4) The roots of this tragic blindness must lie in capitalism's ability to alienate people from their environment for if people knew what they were doing to the land, they would change their ways.
(5) It is typical of Keegan not to wish to alienate people who are hoping to arrange an ecologically sound disposal of their mortal remains upon their own flowerbeds.
(6) The experience will drive him away from his deaf parents and alienate him from an unsympathetic hearing world
(7) The association does not wish to alienate its members
(8) They defended the Masai against attempts to alienate their land
(9) The danger, of course, is that this unfamiliar discourse can alienate the candidate from other members of the search committee.
(10) Ever since the 1290 statute it has been a principle of the law that generally an estate owner should have a free and unfettered power to alienate his property.
(11) The ultimate purpose of the acquisitions is to enable the Territory to validly alienate Crown land in the manner that is stated in the notices of proposed acquisition.
(12) He has continually u251cu00f6u251cu00e7u251cu2510put himself aboutu251cu00f6u251cu00e7u251cu00fb in a way which is bound to alienate colleagues and antagonise the general public.
(13) Aside from stretching the limits of plausibility, these actions only serve to frustrate us and alienate us from the characters.
(14) In this, as in other matters, he has been going out of his way not to alienate the party, members of which hold key posts in his cabinet.
(15) I choose to be loyal to my values and to alienate my team members.
(16) I didn't exercise that option, because I didn't want to alienate my fellow directors and counselors by appearing insubordinate.
(17) Added to this is the failure of the party to seriously address these issues, which has alienated many ordinary party members.
(18) Deborah thinks about everything in material terms, which has alienated her from the other members of her family.
(19) Language and imagination, far from alienating us from nature, are our most powerful and natural tools for re-engaging with it.
(20) Now we don't know what to do unless we are alienated from speech, from our environment, from our locality.
estrange
alien
reconcile
Disarm