|
EMBITTER |
Alienate |
|
DISUNITE |
Alienate |
|
DISAFFECT |
Alienate |
|
ESTRANGE |
Alienate |
|
|
ALIENATED |
Of Alienate |
|
ALIENATING |
Of Alienate |
|
STRANGE |
To alienate; to estrange. |
|
STRANGER |
To estrange; to alienate. |
|
|
DISALLIEGE |
To alienate from allegiance. |
|
DENATURALIZE |
To render unnatural; to alienate from nature. |
|
IRRECONCILE |
To prevent from being reconciled; to alienate or
disaffect. |
|
ALIEN |
To alienate; to estrange; to transfer, as property or
ownership. |
|
NONALIENATION |
Failure to alienate; also, the state of not being
alienated. |
|
ABALIENATE |
To transfer the title of from one to another; to
alienate. |
|
AMORTIZE |
To alienate in mortmain, that is, to convey to a
corporation. See Mortmain. |
|
ALIENE |
To alien or alienate; to transfer, as title or property;
as, to aliene an estate. |
|
DEVEST |
To take away, as an authority, title, etc., to deprive;
to alienate, as an estate. |
|
MORTMAIN |
Possession of lands or tenements in, or conveyance to,
dead hands, or hands that cannot alienate. |
|
UNSECULARIZE |
To cause to become not secular; to detach from
secular things; to alienate from the world. |
|
DISINCLINE |
To incline away the affections of; to excite a
slight aversion in; to indispose; to make unwilling; to alienate. |
|
WEAN |
Hence, to detach or alienate the affections of, from any
object of desire; to reconcile to the want or loss of anything. |
|
DISPOSE |
...to
pass over into the control of some one else, as by selling; to
alienate; to part with; to relinquish; to get rid of; as, to dispose of
a h... |
|
FORFEIT |
...lt,
offense, or crime; to render one's self by misdeed liable to be
deprived of; to alienate the right to possess, by some neglect or
crime; ... |