| 1. | a person with whom one has had no personal acquaintance: He is a perfect stranger to me. |
| 2. | a newcomer in a place or locality: a stranger in town. |
| 3. | an outsider: They want no strangers in on the club meetings. |
| 4. | a person who is unacquainted with or unaccustomed to something (usually fol. by to): He is no stranger to poverty. |
| 5. | a person who is not a member of the family, group, community, or the like, as a visitor or guest: Our town shows hospitality to strangers. |
| 6. | Law. one not privy or party to an act, proceeding, etc. |
adjective, strang⋅er, strang⋅est, adverb | 1. | unusual, extraordinary, or curious; odd; queer: a strange remark to make. |
| 2. | estranged, alienated, etc., as a result of being out of one's natural environment: In Bombay I felt strange. |
| 3. | situated, belonging, or coming from outside of one's own locality; foreign: to move to a strange place; strange religions. |
| 4. | outside of one's previous experience; hitherto unknown; unfamiliar: strange faces; strange customs. |
| 5. | unaccustomed to or inexperienced in; unacquainted (usually fol. by to): I'm strange to this part of the job. |
| 6. | distant or reserved; shy. |
| 7. | in a strange manner. |
| French, L'Étranger), a novel (1942) by Albert Camus. |
strange (strānj) adj. strang·er, strang·est
[Middle English, from Old French estrange, extraordinary, foreign, from Latin extrāneus, adventitious, foreign, from extrā, outside, from feminine ablative of exter, outward; see eghs in Indo-European roots.] strange'ly adv. Synonyms: These adjectives describe what deviates from the usual or customary. Strange refers especially to what is unfamiliar, unknown, or inexplicable: All summer I traveled through strange lands. |
Stranger
This word generally denotes a person from a foreign land residing in Palestine. Such persons enjoyed many privileges in common with the Jews, but still were separate from them. The relation of the Jews to strangers was regulated by special laws (Deut. 23:3; 24:14-21; 25:5; 26:10-13). A special signification is also sometimes attached to this word. In Gen. 23:4 it denotes one resident in a foreign land; Ex. 23:9, one who is not a Jew; Num. 3:10, one who is not of the family of Aaron; Ps. 69:8, an alien or an unknown person. The Jews were allowed to purchase strangers as slaves (Lev. 25:44, 45), and to take usury from them (Deut. 23:20).