1. To exclude from a group or society: "Lepers wrapped in bandages—Ostracized from their villages and unable to obtain work—rushed up to passing cars, waving crude handmade flags to warn of potholes, in the hope that motorists would fling loose change at them before they got too close" (John Ghazvinian).
Or, Ostracized, Obtain, Of
2. To exclude, by general consent, from society, friendship, conversation, privileges, etc.: His friends Ostracized him after his father's arrest
Ostracized
3. Thucydides was Ostracized, and to the end of his life, Pericles reigned the undisputed master of the public policy of Athens
Ostracized, Of
4. 3 OF 8 VARIOUS He had walked in the shadow of death and had been deprived of office; Ostracized like …
Of, Office, Ostracized
5. Ostracized In English, many past and present participles of verbs can be used as adjectives
Ostracized, Of
6. Perpetually untrustworthy individuals are identified and Ostracized …
Ostracized
7. To exclude from a group or society: "Lepers wrapped in bandages—Ostracized from their villages and unable to obtain work—rushed up to passing cars, waving crude handmade flags to warn of potholes, in the hope that motorists would fling loose change at them before they got too close" (John Ghazvinian).
Or, Ostracized, Obtain, Of
8. “Being excluded or Ostracized is an invisible form of bullying that doesn’t leave bruises, and therefore we often underestimate its impact,” said Kipling D
Or, Ostracized, Of, Often
9. Ostracized is defined as excluded, left out or made to feel unwelcome
Ostracized, Out, Or
10. An example of Ostracized is if you invited everyone to your party except one person and told all …
Of, Ostracized, One
11. To prevent someone from being part of a group because you dislike the person or disapprove of something the person has done: She was Ostracized by fellow officers after bringing charges against …
Of, Or, Ostracized, Officers
12. When a citizen received enough votes from fellow Athenians to be Ostracized, he had to …
Ostracized
13. To exclude, by general consent, from society, friendship, conversation, privileges, etc.: His friends Ostracized him after his father's arrest
Ostracized
14. “Anthropologically this has been done for eons; burdensome members of groups are Ostracized
Of, Ostracized
15. When he finally snapped, Rodger followed the predicted pattern of violence in the Ostracized in not wanting merely to harm himself or random people, but members of the group from which he felt excluded
Of, Ostracized, Or
16. Dealing with being Ostracized in the office takes perseverance
Ostracized, Office
17. When the Iranian president claimed that the Holocaust was a hoax, he was Ostracized by the international community
Ostracized
18. Among those who were Ostracized were Aristides (483–482 B.C.), Themistocles (471 B.C.), and the philosopher Damon, the teacher of Pericles (443 B.C.)
Ostracized, Of
19. The debut novel of social anthropologist and expert on all things teenaged Leslie Margolis, Fix is the story of a young woman, Cameron Beekman, who suffered years of being Ostracized and called "Beakface" because of her large nose before a simple nose job transformed her life.
Of, On, Ostracized
20. A small boy is Ostracized from his village, where they claim an evil spirit possesses him
Ostracized
21. They meet people with leprosy who are Ostracized even by the doctors who know they are not contagious
Ostracized
22. No longer Ostracized from the national community, the painting and its …
Ostracized
23. If someone is Ostracized, people deliberately behave in an unfriendly way towards them and do not allow them to take part in any of their social activities.
Ostracized, Of
24. Welcome to the page with the answer to the clue Ostracized person
Ostracized
25. He was Ostracized by the other students
Ostracized, Other
26. → See Verb table Examples from the Corpus ostracize • But it was too late to save Thernistokles; in 471 he was Ostracized
Ostracize, Ostracized
27. • His client is broke, Baker said, and Ostracized.
Ostracized
28. I have been Ostracized for simply appearing to be friends with a coworker with an odd personality, and she happened to be a whistle blower on a discrimination case against our supervisor, and the psychopath coworker lied to the supervisor about me and the boss has been holding a grudge for 2 1/2 years.
Ostracized, Odd, On, Our
29. Synonyms for Ostracized include shunned, blackballed, ignored, unwanted, disesteemed, disfavored, rejected, spurned, unaccepted and unloved
Ostracized
30. ‘Einstein's theory of relativity was Ostracized by many scientists in the cause of self-preservation, while quantum mechanics and cybernetics were virtually banned.’ ‘Some police families worried about being Ostracized by their own neighbors.’
Of, Ostracized, Own
31. Definition of Ostracized in the Definitions.net dictionary
Of, Ostracized
32. What does Ostracized mean? Information and translations of Ostracized in the most comprehensive dictionary definitions resource on the web.
Ostracized, Of, On
33. Of course, this sanctimonious reasoning was the height of hypocrisy, since one of the reasons Bobby and JFK agreed that Sinatra should be Ostracized was because he was friends with Sam Giancana and his girlfriend, Judith Exner—a woman with whom JFK was having sex! President Kennedy liked to live on the edge and he liked to take chances, observed retired Secret Service agent Lawrence Newman
Of, One, Ostracized, On, Observed
34. Instead of the nobel peace prize, I was Ostracized by my peers, who branded me a charlatan, A madman
Of, Ostracized
35. Krypton follows Superman's grandfather, Seg-El, whose family, the House of El, has been Ostracized …
Of, Ostracized
36. ‘Einstein's theory of relativity was Ostracized by many scientists in the cause of self-preservation, while quantum mechanics and cybernetics were virtually banned.’ ‘Some police families worried about being Ostracized by their own neighbors.’
Of, Ostracized, Own
37. The word Ostracized is the past form of ostracize in the first person singular.There are other translations for this conjugation.
Ostracized, Of, Ostracize, Other
38. Ostracized, no one will live to tell No return, no escape, no way out, face your fate As the tyrant dies, his reign comes to an end But as a martyr dies, his
Ostracized, One, Out
39. Ostracize (third-person singular simple present ostracizes, present participle ostracizing, simple past and past participle Ostracized) (American spelling, Oxford British English) (transitive, Ancient Greece, historical) To ban a person from a city for five or ten years through the …
Ostracize, Ostracizes, Ostracizing, Ostracized, Oxford, Or
40. When women feared being Ostracized by society if they returned to their original religion after being forced to convert, religious institutions and authorities certainly had a role to play, although the State also needed to intervene to protect such women
Ostracized, Original
41. Ostracized Lyrics: Legions upon legions roam the roads to nowhere / Street wise ragged with rage / Fucked by society, left outside / The system's cold embace / Insane / Unsafe / Labelled / Rougue
Ostracized, Outside
42. I am on a graduate trainee and I am being Ostracized for coming through a disability scheme
On, Ostracized
43. He was Ostracized by his colleagues for refusing to support the strike
Ostracized
44. The regime risks being Ostracized by the international community.
Ostracized
OSTRACIZED [ˈästrəˌsīz]
VERB
The English verb ostracize can mean "to exile by the ancient method of ostracism," but these days it usually refers to the general exclusion of one person from a group at the agreement of its members. Ostracism and ostracize derive from the Greek ostrakizein ("to banish by voting with potsherds").
Here are some examples. Sentence Examples. Young narcissistic adults tend to be ostracized and shunned by peers and colleagues. A small boy is ostracized from his village, where they claim an evil spirit possesses him. They meet people with leprosy who are ostracized even by the doctors who know they are not contagious.
noun The fact or state of being ostracized; banishment from a society or group; ostracism.