Estrangement in a sentence as a noun

If he does not change, then if you can make him leave with estrangement, then I suggest making him leave.

Modern social science neglects the concept of estrangement.

The social impact, for one, is in general a large extent of estrangement from our human essence.

I can't agree with that.>> The social impact, for one, is in general a large extent of estrangement from our human essence.

The fact his wife chose to sue for emotional estrangement instead of explicit acts is interesting.

Moreover, no penalty whatsoever, or one with no teeth, does absolutely nothing except reinforce the estrangement, which is worse.

A sense of misalignment, disconnect, or estrangement from your own emotionsUsually called borderline/mania3.

I think "irrationality" should be addressed on these grounds instead of merely labelling a person's opinion as irrational/bad, along with the social estrangement this entails.

On occasion I have found that voicing a contrary opinion results in estrangement, but more worryingly, merely not voicing a validation is enough to achieve some alienation.

The effects of that state differ from person to person, but alienations/estrangement from family and friends and unwillingness to prioritize anything other than the company are common ones.

" That study has its own value which I am not inclined to belittle; it tells him a great deal about how things work in nature or in engineering: but it tells him nothing about the meaning of life and can in no way cure his estrangement and secret despair.

And I said, “Good, ’cause that’s the last good night’s sleep you’re gonna get.”Having your underlings work to the point of sleep deprivation and estrangement from their families so that you can get the acclaim, the adrenaline rush, and outsize stock market payouts isn't "brilliant", or "intense.

Women are vastly outnumbered by men in many sectors, including workplace injuries and fatalities, acute and chronic homelessness, suicides, mental illness including schizophrenia, violent crime victimization, recruitment into gangs and child armies at a young age, legal genital mutilation, false imprisonment, unfair estrangement from children, involuntary celibacy, and a host of other exciting fields.

Estrangement definitions

noun

separation resulting from hostility

See also: alienation

noun

the feeling of being alienated from other people

See also: alienation disaffection