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Ghurba

غربة · GHUR-ba · Arabic · noun
negativeintensity: highsadnessanticipation

The condition and ache of estrangement.

Definition

The condition and ache of estrangement — being a foreigner or exile far from home, with the attendant alienation, loneliness, and longing for the familiar.

Connotation & usage

Specifically spatial and relational: alienation caused by displacement from homeland, not generalized loneliness or desolation. Unlike saudade (a bittersweet longing for an absent person or time), ghurba centers on the lived predicament of the stranger-in-a-strange-land; unlike Korean han (collective accumulated grief), it is the migrant's or exile's personal estrangement (the exiled person is a mughtarib).

Literal sense

“estrangement, being-a-stranger, exile,” from the root gh-r-b (“to go away; be strange; the west”).

Related words

Etymology

From the Arabic root غ-ر-ب (gh-r-b) “to go away / be strange / the west,” linking “stranger” (gharīb) and “west/sunset” (gharb) — where the sun departs.

How it has changed

Deep roots in classical Arabic poetry; took on renewed force with 20th–21st-century Arab migration and displacement, and recurs in Gulf music and scholarship.

Dispute & caveat

Definition is solid and widely attested. Don't conflate ghurba (the emotional/existential state) with the distinct Islamic theological term ghurabāʼ (“the strangers”). (One popular source misprints the root with qāf; the correct radical is ghayn.)

Sources

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From The Lexicon of Feeling — a carefully sourced dictionary & thesaurus of emotions across 60 languages. Definitions are verified against the cited sources; emotion-family, valence, and intensity tags are editorial. This is a learning tool for emotional vocabulary, not therapy or a substitute for professional care. © 2026 The Lexicon of Feeling.