Alienate in a sentence as a verb

They will actually alienate a lot of women.

"Because you haven't learned to employ them in a way that doesn't alienate the very people you are trying to help.

It won't help anyone, will likely alienate people from the site, will probably lead to hurt feelings, and so on and so forth.

They quite plainly state that they knew this would alienate their existing audience, and that they were perfectly fine with that.

Now everyone is gonna "watch out" when they meet a woman, "keep their mouth shut" and many other things that alienate said woman.

Microsoft can't alienate enterprise, and I think we all know how much enterprise hates even UI changes.

Attempting to alienate the President from an official press release from the White House is pushing a bit too far on a technicality.

100 million ensures that you keep a single employee, but how many do you alienate at the same time?Hard to blame Google's decision, I'm sure they gave it much more thought than I have.

I really don't expect to see 'pg do anything to alienate anybody who could potentially write a useful story about a YC company.

The aim is precisely to force the government into ever more draconian measures which alienate the population and build support for the terrorists - to force the government to try to fight a war on the terrorists' terms.

Pre-bust, no matter what the abuses, the law firms held ultimate sway because even the largest companies with the most sophisticated in-house staffs would be wary of switching firms easily or of wanting to alienate their main outside firms in any way.

This is an argument on par with "they hate us for our freedom".This kind of intellectually lazy and arrogant attitude will only serve to alienate SV further from the rest of society, which, not coincidentally, is one of the core arguments of most recent criticism directed at SV.

Alienate definitions

verb

arouse hostility or indifference in where there had formerly been love, affection, or friendliness; "She alienated her friends when she became fanatically religious"

See also: estrange alien disaffect

verb

transfer property or ownership; "The will aliened the property to the heirs"

See also: alien

verb

make withdrawn or isolated or emotionally dissociated; "the boring work alienated his employees"