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"sense of marginalization" is a correct and usable phrase in written English.
You can use this phrase when you want to describe a feeling of being excluded and pushed to the side, due to a person's race, gender, or other characteristics. For example, "Jill felt a deep sense of marginalization after she was turned down for the job because of her age."
Exact(14)
The sense of marginalization and frustration with American policy and tactics is growing here among Northern Alliance officials and soldiers.
He grew up a British Muslim with a sense of marginalization at home and anger at what he saw overseas — particularly the Israeli invasion of Lebanon in 1982.
The effort is part of a mass movement among North American orchestra executives and boards in recent years to deal with an increasing sense of marginalization and dwindling dollars.
Amid the mayhem, Sunni leaders of protests, which have been going on since December and grew from a deep sense of marginalization at the hands of the Shiite-controlled government, said they would now resort to violence to achieve their aims.
Whereas these daunting circumstances might have trampled the fighting spirit of a weaker girl, in Munro's case they served to fuel a writerly sense of marginalization and a conviction that she was cut out for different things, even if not always by her own choice: "I was a person who didn't fit anywhere.
Takis Michas, a Greek journalist who has written a book, "Unholy Alliance," detailing Greece's financial and paramilitary ties to Slobodan Milosevic's Serbia, points to the continuing sense of isolation felt by many Greeks whose world views "revolve around conspiracy theories, feelings of victimization and a strong sense of marginalization".
Similar(46)
But in recent days, Mr. Allawi and members of his coalition, Iraqiya, have accused Prime Minister Nuri Kamal al-Maliki of failing to follow through on his promises to share power, deepening a sense of their marginalization.
There was also a broader sense of social marginalization that individuals experienced beyond their individual friendships.
Much like their Somali counterparts in the northeast, locals here have a shared sense of profound marginalization, and for a long time no one has really given a shit.
In other words, their experiences radically differed from those of their GenX colleagues in most Western countries, while, nonetheless, sharing in a sense of loss, marginalization, questioning and reevaluation.
This attitude was probably in part due to Jews' sense of exclusion and marginalization from the institutions where natural philosophy was taught and practiced (an important exception to this rule was Italy, where personalities like Elijah del Medigo, circa 1458 1493, took advantage of the separation between science and theology in the universities).
More suggestions(16)
sense of isolation
sense of disenfranchisement
sense of sight
perception of marginalization
sense of edge
sense of plan
sense of ostracism
sense of disadvantage
sense of segregation
sense of exemption
sense of discrimination
feeling of marginalization
sense of exclusiveness
sense of exclusion
sense of stigma
sense of inclusion
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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