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"alienated life of" is correct and can be used in written English.
It is typically used to describe someone who is feeling disconnected or isolated from others and society. Example: The protagonist of the novel lived a lonely and alienated life, never feeling like he belonged anywhere.
Exact(2)
He also draws an effective portrait of the alienated life of the airport-hopping corporate manager.
Among these psychological investigations are the alienated life of Silas in "The Death of the Hired Man," the inability of Amy in "Home Burial" to walk the difficult path from grief back to normality, the rigid mindset of the neighbour in "Mending Wall," and the paralyzing fear that twists the personality of Doctor Magoon in "A Hundred Collars".
Similar(58)
Conditions of labor imposed submission and standardization on human life, as well as exploiting workers and alienating them from a life of freedom and self-determination.
Which is the opposite of what the ad shows us which is a solipsistic model who is alienated from one of life's most singular experiences because she is too busy regarding her own image.
He is now twice the age I was when I began having sex, and on some level, I worry he's not just two 20-year-old virgins stacked upon one another but has lived a compounded life of frustration exponentially alienated, depressed, and sexually or emotionally frustrated.
As American consumers, we've become alienated from the life cycle of our food.
I felt alienated by society, resigned to a life of scraping by – outraged by obvious injustices (distribution of wealth, treatment of minority groups, especially women) and not sure how to give vent.
He is now twice the age I was when I began having sex, and on some level I worry he's not just two twenty year old virgins stacked upon one another, but has lived a compounded life of frustration; exponentially alienated, depressed, and sexually or emotionally frustrated.
Other characteristics of American life alienated the Romantics: the distaste for tragedy (a moral corrective to illusions of invincibility); the strong preference for practicality; the severance from history; and, above all, what the Germans called bodenlosigkeit, a willed rootlessness, embodied in the flimsy frame construction of American houses.
Tarkovsky saw this sad tale as a reflection of his own life, alienated from the Soviet Union, and possibly his death, too.
Eventually, he alienated most of his allies.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com