different between alien vs terran

alien

English

Alternative forms

  • alyaunte (15th-16th centuries)

Etymology

From Middle English alien, a borrowing from Old French alien, aliene, from Latin ali?nus (belonging to someone else, later exotic, foreign), from Latin alius (other), from Proto-Indo-European *h?élyos. Related to English else.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?e?.li.?n/

Noun

alien (plural aliens)

  1. Any life form of extraterrestrial or extradimensional origin.
  2. A person, animal, plant, or other thing which is from outside the family, group, organization, or territory under consideration.
  3. A foreigner residing in a country.
  4. One excluded from certain privileges; one alienated or estranged.

Synonyms

  • (person, etc. from outside): fremd (rare, chiefly dialectal), guest, stranger
  • (foreigner): outlander; see also Thesaurus:foreigner
  • (life form of extraterrestrial origin): See also Thesaurus:extraterrestrial

Related terms

Translations

Adjective

alien (comparative more alien, superlative most alien)

  1. Not belonging to the same country, land, or government, or to the citizens or subjects thereof; foreign.
  2. Very unfamiliar, strange, or removed.
    • 1850, William Wordsworth, The Prelude
      An alien sound of melancholy.
  3. Pertaining to extraterrestrial life.

Synonyms

  • allotrious

Translations

Verb

alien (third-person singular simple present aliens, present participle aliening, simple past and past participle aliened)

  1. (transitive) To estrange; to alienate.
  2. (law) To transfer the ownership of something.

Alternative forms

  • aliene

Anagrams

  • A-line, Aline, Elain, Elian, Elina, Nelia, aline, anile, elain, laine, liane, linea

Catalan

Pronunciation

  • (Balearic, Central) IPA(key): /??li.?n/
  • (Valencian) IPA(key): /a?li.en/

Verb

alien

  1. third-person plural present indicative form of aliar

Dutch

Etymology

Borrowed from English alien (stranger, foreigner), from Middle English alien, from Old French alien, from Latin ali?nus.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?e?.li.?n/
  • Hyphenation: ali?en

Noun

alien m (plural aliens)

  1. An alien, an extraterrestrial.
    Synonym: ruimtewezen

French

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /a.lj?n/

Noun

alien m (plural aliens)

  1. alien (extraterrestrial)

Middle English

Etymology 1

From Old French alien, aliene, from Latin ali?nus. Some forms (chiefly nominal) show assimilation to the suffix -ant.

Alternative forms

  • alyon, alean, alyen, aliand, aliaund, aliant, alyant

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /a?li???n/, /?a?li?n/, /?a?li?n/
  • (with assimilation) IPA(key): /?a?liant/, /?a?liau?nt/

Noun

alien (plural aliens)

  1. An outsider or foreign person, especially if resident in one's nation.
  2. One who is alien in some other way (e.g. religion, family)
  3. (rare) An unlawful occupier or possessor of land.
Related terms
Descendants
  • English: alien
  • Scots: alien, awlien
References
  • “?li??n, n.”, in MED Online, Ann Arbor, Mich.: University of Michigan, 2007, retrieved 2019-02-25.

Adjective

alien (plural and weak singular aliene)

  1. Outside, alien, foreign; from or relating to another nation.
  2. Religiously outside; heretical, erring; of false religion or morals.
  3. Distant, isolated, secure, away (from something)
  4. (rare) Under the authority of other nation's religious institutions.
  5. (rare) Not relating to or of oneself; not natural (to one's body).
  6. (rare) Bizarre, weird, exotic.
Descendants
  • English: alien
  • Scots: alien, awlien
References
  • “?li?n, ?lien, adj.”, in MED Online, Ann Arbor, Mich.: University of Michigan, 2007, retrieved 2019-02-25.

Etymology 2

From Old French alier.

Verb

alien

  1. Alternative form of allien

Old French

Etymology

From Latin ali?nus.

Adjective

alien m (oblique and nominative feminine singular aliene)

  1. alien; foreign; non-native
    • 11th century, La Vie de Saint Alexis, BNF manuscript 19525
      alienes terres
      foreign lands

Declension

Noun

alien m (oblique plural aliens, nominative singular aliens, nominative plural alien)

  1. alien (a non-native)

Declension

Descendants

  • ? Middle English: alien, alyon, alean, alyen, aliand, aliaund, aliant, alyant
    • English: alien
    • Scots: alien, awlien

Portuguese

Etymology

From English alien (extraterrestrial life form), from Old French alien, aliene, from Latin ali?nus (foreign), from alius (other), from Proto-Indo-European *h?élyos. Doublet of alheio.

Pronunciation

  • (Brazil) IPA(key): /?a.li.?j?/

Noun

alien m (plural aliens)

  1. alien; extraterrestrial life form
    Synonyms: alienígena, ET, extraterrestre

alien From the web:

  • what alien species is yoda
  • what alien race is yoda
  • what alien means
  • what alienware laptop do i have


terran

English

Adjective

terran (comparative more terran, superlative most terran)

  1. (chiefly science fiction, uncommon) Alternative letter-case form of Terran (of or from Earth; terrestrial)
    • 2008, Dirk Schulze-Makuch, Louis Neal Irwin, Life in the Universe: Expectations and Constraints, Springer Science & Business Media (?ISBN), page 128:
      [] dinitrogen does not have properties that would be considered as suitable for life from a terran perspective (Table 7.2).
    • 2008, Ron Sanders, Legerdemainia, (?ISBN), page 71:
      As they approached the steps the Klee-shaes could hear a terran favorite over the great building's Public Address system—it was Neil Young warbling Keep On Rocking In The Free World, but a Fartian host, misunderstanding the moment, transferred the track to Mollify.
    • 2011, David Weber, How Firm a Foundation: A Novel in the Safehold Series (#5), Macmillan (?ISBN):
      Like most “fish” native to Safehold, it has a very long, sinuous body but the head does resemble a terran hake or cod, with a hooked jaw.
    • 2013, Doug Strider, Space Danger - Space Marines' Graveyard, Douglas Strider (?ISBN):
      Annual Pack Includes:
      Gift pack - SOL30000 a terran year (equivalent to SOL2500/month over the duration of the adoption).
      Personalised certificate.
      Stand-up photo-portrait (14.5 x 200m) of your soldier.
    • 2013, Gordon R. Dickson, Naked to the Stars, Simon and Schuster (?ISBN):
      Cal cut wide in his shoulder jets with a short burst and slid in to earth under a tree so like a terran cottonwood it was hard to tell the difference. The trees on windy hillsides on Lehaunan had been warped and strangely twisted []
    • 2014, Gardner Dozois, The Year's Best Science Fiction: Thirty-First Annual Collection, St. Martin's Griffin (?ISBN):
      Hobbs' Street smelled odd, damp and sweet, but that wasn't due to the residents here but to an odd mutation of a terran honey fungus that had spread throughout the moon colony, running its mycelia through air vents, electrical ducting or []
    • 2014, Don Pendleton, New Orleans Knockout, Open Road Media (?ISBN):
      The NASA engineer admiringly dubbed the complete project a “terran module,” comparing it favorably with the best thing yet developed in lunar modules. Bolan liked it, though he was a bit awed by the electronic capabilities of his new warwagon.

Anagrams

  • Ranter, Ratner, errant, ranter

terran From the web:

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  • what terrance mean
  • what terran units counter protoss
  • what terran mean
  • what's terranova in english
  • what terranean meaning
  • terranovaboys what happened
  • terrance what color is the wind
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