outcast
noun
- person separated from society due to a stigma
adjective
No English definition recorded for this entry.
L338970 on Wikidata ↗Wiktionary
Pronunciation: /ˈaʊtkɑːst/ / /ˈaʊtkæst/
adj
Etymology: From Middle English outcasten, equivalent to out- + cast.
- That has been cast out; banished, ostracized.
“O, horrible fate! Outcast, rejected, / As one with pestilence infected!”
“We were not a big huggie family so I was very, very encased in a little stay-away-from-me shell growing-up, and here I got to open up and feel safe and able to touch and hold and be able to be with another human being, which was really a big relief, a very positive part of my understanding of myself that I wasn't just this outcast evil outsider of everything.”
noun
Etymology: From Middle English outcaste, outecaste, equivalent to out- + cast.
- One that has been excluded from a society or a system, a pariah, a leper.
“If ever you chance upon the whole truth about any outcast or many, never tell it to just anybody, or at least not right away; unjust exclusion from a society is just one kind of hardship.”
“The other factions believe that those who are Factionless are nomads and outcasts. But they are actually a fully functioning community.”
- Synonym of outsider: someone who does not belong, a misfit.
“Do you ever feel like an outcast? You don't have to fit into the format Oh, but it's okay to be different 'Cause baby, so am I”
- A quarrel.
- The amount of increase in the bulk of grain during malting.
verb
Etymology: From Middle English outcasten, equivalent to out- + cast.
- To cast out; to banish.
“And her faire yellow locks behind her flew, / Looſely diſperſt with puff of euery blaſt: / All as a blazing ſtarre doth farre outcaſt / His hearie beames, and flaming lockes diſpredd, / At ſight whereof the people ſtand aghaſt: […]”
“It means equal ruin to me, as the world reckons it — outcasting, the loss of my appointment, the breaking off my life's work. I pay my price.”