unsocialized

unsocialized

(ʌnˈsəʊʃəˌlaɪzd) or

unsocialised

adj
marked by unsocialism
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014
References in periodicals archive ?
Their parents are alcoholic (father) and oblivious (mother), and Kitty, though tall and wise, is withdrawn and unsocialized to an extreme degree.
A fearful or unsocialized dog who is crated or tethered might feel trapped and is likely to become even more defensively aggressive if confined where visitors will pass closely by, look at or speak to her, or even worse, poke fingers into a crate or attempt to touch her.
contingent, unsocialized, and determining force', (23) an offensive
There was mounting anxiety over the "youth problem," whether teddy boys, "angry young men," or supposedly unsocialized youngsters following the ending of National Service in the armed forces.
Under the developmental stage models, unrestrained and unsocialized youth are brought under control through normalizing and institutionalizing processes.
An unsocialized puppy is more likely to be fearful of new situations and people as an adult, Dr.
Having spent their entire lives in a backyard, the dogs were unsocialized and fearful of strangers.
(175) Her motherhood was put on trial not just as a result of her son's injury, but through the attribution of mother blame at what were interpreted as his character traits, not simply a disability, as a social worker "testified that he was 'the most unsocialized child' she had ever seen," characterizing him as "a little animal child." (176)
Internet means that large numbers of "unsocialized" speakers