0 a person who is not involved with a particular group of people or organization or who does not live in a particular place:
Outsiders have a glamorized idea of what it is like to work in Hollywood.
As a child he was very much an outsider, never participating in the games other children played.
2 a person who is not involved with a particular group of people or an organization, or who does not live in a particular place:
3 someone who is paid by a company or organization to do a particular job, but who is not a permanent employee:
Besides identifying outsiders, the police also needed to know the residents of the community.
They stress such things as population density, circumscription in a small area, conquest by outsiders of the diffusion of the idea of divine kingship.
However well-integrated they seem to be, they are still outsiders, as well as insiders, and they have to work with this double agency.
In the past, this has involved both reprimanding the broadcasters and offering them support, particularly when under attack from outsiders.
She reads the two concepts as particular relationships between museum insiders and outsiders.
The involved parties, professionals, the local community and outsiders have different means of power and knowledge at their disposition.
Archaeologists involved in the local heritage industry might be better equipped to deal with the sensitivity of minority and localist ideas of heritage than outsiders.
Respectable outsiders embraced the movement's social work but increasingly rejected its evangelical message.
中文繁体
外部的人, 局外人, 外來者…
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外部的人, 局外人, 外来者…
MoreEspañol
afuerano, -a, marginado…
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estranho, -a, excluído…
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yabancı, herhangi bir gruba/kuruluşa/yere ait olmayan kimse…
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exclu/-ue [masculine-feminine], personne [feminine] étrangère, étranger/-ère…
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nezasvěcený člověk, outsider…
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outsider…
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